The IBC Innovation Factory is designed to support
new ways of learning. The 12,800 square metres educational building is
the result of a refurbishment project of the paint manufacturer GORI’s factory
from 1978, which set new standards for factories at the time.
In the spirit of the original factory, schmidt
hammer lassen architects, in collaboration with International Business College
(IBC) Kolding, has created the settings for a ground-breaking and creative
learning environment, aiming to become the world’s best.
The ambition is to be a training camp for future
innovators. With the acquisition of the GORI factory in the summer of 2010, the
IBC gained access to a unique physical environment characterized by an
impressive pioneering spirit and vision.
It was the first factory plant in Denmark to
unite production and management in one large room, allowing visual connection
between the two. The large paint tanks were decorated by the French artist Jean
Dewasne, in the conviction that art in the workplace would inspire employees
and provide a better working environment.
The same idea inspired the incorporation of
badminton courts and Ping-Pong tables on the production floor for the
employees. The main task for schmidt hammer lassen architects has been to
preserve and emphasize the building’s existing qualities and transform the
facilities into an innovative learning environment.
By using six elements – fire, water, greenery,
light, sound and air – the concept for the new Innovation Factory was developed
with an emphasis on stimulating the users’ senses.
A central teaching facility in the shape of an
indoor ‘landscape furniture’ designed in Douglas
pine wood incorporates a variety of learning spaces and experiences.
The wooden structure, which seems to float above a
surface of water, has an auditorium, places for open study, an amphitheatre,
and closed podiums for group work or quiet study time. There are green plants,
the sound of trickling water, birds in aviaries and plenty of daylight from the
skylights above.
Location:
Kolding, Denmark
Architects: Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects
Engineer: Rambøll A/S
Consultants: Alectia
Main Contractor: MT Højgaard a/s, Odense
Area: 12,800 m2
Year: 2012
Client: IBC International Business College, Kolding
Photographs: Adam Mørk
Architects: Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects
Engineer: Rambøll A/S
Consultants: Alectia
Main Contractor: MT Højgaard a/s, Odense
Area: 12,800 m2
Year: 2012
Client: IBC International Business College, Kolding
Photographs: Adam Mørk








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