• © MVRDV

    © MVRDV

  • © MVRDV

    © MVRDV

  • © MVRDV

    © MVRDV

  • © MVRDV

    © MVRDV

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Commercial

Construction commences on MVRDV’s sustainable Amsterdam complex

Work has begun on Matrix 1, a six storey office and laboratory complex in Amsterdam’s Science Park

by Georgina Johnston 03 March 2021 Sustainable Buildings

The project is targeting BREEAM-Excellent certification; the building will be virtually energy neutral and uses demountable construction techniques, meaning it can be disassembled at the end of its lifespan to allow 89% of the materials to be reused later. Matrix 1 is expected to be delivered in 2022. 

MVRDV designed Matrix 1 which sits in Amsterdam Science Park, an environment in which scientists and entrepreneurs work on sustainable solutions for current and future problems. In addition to the buildings of UvA’s Faculty of Science, Mathematics and Computer Science (FNWI), the campus now offers space for homes, data centres and office and laboratory space, including the six existing buildings of the Matrix Innovation Center. 

Laboratories are generally secured areas which remain closed to outsiders. Nevertheless, the Matrix Innovation Center wanted the complex to be a social work environment. MVRDV designed an open building, where employees have more freedom to choose their workplace, thanks to an open staircase that forms the social heart of the building. The zigzag shape of the stairwell is inspired by the campus path network, and offers various meeting points and spaces for work. Thanks to the glass façade that follows its zigzag shape, the stairwell is also visible from outside, forming a beacon on the site.  

Sustainability is a common thread in the design. For example, the steel support structure and the concrete floors of the 13,000 sq m building are demountable, making building parts easily reusable in the future. Almost all surfaces of the complex have been used for ecological functions: the roof is green and has solar panels, while birds can nest in the diamond-shaped facade panels. The building will meet the ambitious Amsterdam targets for energy performance (EPC 0.15) and water storage. 


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