The Warszawa
Business Garden is a plan for a business park composed of seven buildings
housing offices, shops, hotels, and a meeting centre within an area of over 90.000 m2, is situated in
close proximity of Zwirki i Wigury Street which links the international airport
to the city center of Warsaw.
The location
provides very convenient access to the public transport facilities. It is one of three modern business
parks to be developed by SwedeCenter under the common Business
Garden brand in Poland.
The Studio Fuksas
designed the Building n. 1, which hosts several functions, a hotel with 206
rooms arranged on 5 levels, a Congress Center for about 800 seats, an event
Centre, retail areas, a restaurant, a cafoffice spaces and 280 car parks.
The different functions
are distributed around an open space on the ground floor, nodal point where
accessing various areas, organised in such a way that they can be used
separately or, as required, merged.
The front opening of
the Park on the first floor has a large "green" terrace, located in
front of the restaurant and can be used for all events connected to the hotel
as the Convention Center.
The max height of
the complex is 25 m.
The 3 on the 2 upper floors jut below to create a sort of shelter that protects
throughout the building guests, visitors or buyers from rain and snow.
A sculptural
volumetric strength showing the different functions which had to be integrated
in the design process are the basic idea of the complex while taking care about
the surrounding aspects of the closer cityscape of Warsaw and the idea of the
central Wisniowy Garden Park.
The facades towards
streets are straight, while the fae lines towards the park are moving slightly.
The file rouge of the interior design is the use of color for defining spaces
and creating environments full of ambience. Deep shaded colours alternate
through the floors and define the reception and communal areas rather than the
individual rooms.
The way traced by
the hotel corridors is characterized by an interplay of lights and dimensions. On
the lateral walls, growing protrusions take the shape of separated steps that
gradually narrow the visual field up to the end of the path.
The dimensional
effect is highlighted by a coloured pattern that runs obliquely all along the
way, thus reshaping the perception of space from an artistic point of view.
Location: Żwirki i Wigury, Warsaw, Poland
Architects: Massimiliano and Doriana Fuksas
General Project: JSK Architekci
Developer: SwedeCenter
General Contractor: Hochtief Polska
Area: 14,926 sqm
Year: 2013
Developer: SwedeCenter
Photographs: Piotr Krajewski
Architects: Massimiliano and Doriana Fuksas
General Project: JSK Architekci
Developer: SwedeCenter
General Contractor: Hochtief Polska
Area: 14,926 sqm
Year: 2013
Developer: SwedeCenter
Photographs: Piotr Krajewski






















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