The Palmerston 6-14 complex is located within the protection zone of the listed monument Maison van Eetvelde by architect Victor Horta, as well as within the protection zone of the listed urban landscape of the Squares in Brussels.
Unlike the Leopold District, where the neoclassical façade dominates, the Squares district is characterized by a mix of Belle Époque styles. The variety of styles—eclectic, neo-Gothic, neo-Renaissance, Art Nouveau, and Empire—creates a diverse and colorful whole, fully aligned with the vision that architect G. Bordiau put forward in 1875. In his urban planning concept, he included front gardens to allow for extensions and bay windows without sacrificing living space, all in order to create a lively architectural environment. The row of houses at Palmerstonlaan 6-14 evolved in different phases into the office complex we know today.
As part of the Cityforward project, which aims to counteract monofunctionality in the European Quarter, this complex will be repurposed into residential units. A new building is planned on Eburonenlaan, connected through a green oasis.
This project is a collective and sustainable endeavor centered around a central garden with a flowing water landscape, which interacts with the built environment through terraces, hanging gardens, and a green roof. The diversity of outdoor spaces and the associated reduction of paved surfaces contribute to a biodiverse ecosystem.
The restoration of several distinctive architectural elements, such as the cornices, the original entrance doors, the Art Nouveau windows, and the bay windows, will make the five original houses legible again. These interventions evoke the historical visual identity and restore the residential quality and vibrancy of the Squares district.
Buildings carry stories and values, but often these are stories of exclusion. How do we engage with historic architecture that is not only physically inaccessible but also represents and reproduces an aesthetic of ableism? What if we approached architecture by seeing disabled bodies and experiences not as problems to fix, but as starting points for design?
On Thursday, 30 September, PAF and Büro Juliane Greb invite you to an evening exploring disability as a critical lens and a creative force in architecture. Joining the conversation are Negin Eisazadeh (KU Leuven & ULiège), Sam Michiels (Accessibility Advisory Council of the City of Leuven), and Inge Vinck (architecten Jan de Vylder Inge Vinck).
This conversation is a collaboration between Büro Juliane Gre, PAF (platform voor architectuur & feminisme), the Flanders Architecture Institute (VAi), and Team Vlaams Bouwmeester. Together with the speakers and the audience, we will discuss how to place care, accessibility, and collective experience at the centre, moving beyond checklists and regulations.
Participants: Dr. Ariane Krause (Leibniz Institute of Vegetable and
Ornamental Crops), Michel Riechmann (EAWAG), Ludovico Centis (The Empire), Eleftheria Xenikakis (Kollektiv für Angepasste Technik)
Organized in partnership with SUMMACUMFEMMER
Our concept “Open for Maintenance / Wegen Umbau geöffnet” was selected by the expert commission chaired by Peter Cachola Schmal, Director of Deutsches Architekturmuseum. The commissioner of the contribution is the Federal Ministry of Housing, Urban Development and Construction. “Open for Maintenance / Wegen Umbau geöffnet” aims to demonstrate the opportunities and potentials of the upcoming tasks for sustainable, social and inclusive architecture and urban design by means of concrete examples – and thus translate the Biennale motto “The Laboratory of the Future” by Lesley Lokko, curator of the 18th Architecture Biennale, into practice. Topics such as repair, maintenance and care as well as new alliances and forms of solidarity in architectural practice are at the center of the German contribution.
online symposium and exhibition at The Bernard and Anne Spitzer School of Architecture, NY, read more here.
Die KOOPERATIVE GROSSSTADT eG lobt für Ihren vierten Wohnungsbau einen offenen zweiphasigen Realisierungswettbewerb aus und startet einen offenen Aufruf zur Teilnahme an alle interessierten Architekt*innen. Read more here
this summer, Juliane Greb holds the International Visiting Professorship at PBSA Düsseldorf. Read more here
Essay on DAM Preis finalist project “Scheune Prädikow, Prötzel” by Hütten & Paläste
“…the 2022 Civic Design Conference “The Non-Sexist City” wants to explore the principles and mechanisms of the Sexist and the Non-Sexist City alike. We want to learn about the historic and contemporary discourse on this subject and establish a vibrant discussion on these issues throughout and beyond our program…”
https://pbsa.hs-duesseldorf.de/studium/studiengaenge/ma_cd/civic-design-konferenz#cdc22
San Riemo (Büro Juliane Greb & Summacumfemmer) wins DAM Preis für Architektur in Deutschland 2022
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sJFlyHsrquk (ab 1h 09min)