The Commons by Department of Architecture

The Commons
Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

For Bangkok, or any other modern-day cosmopolitan cities, living conditions and spatial form continue to evolve. Bangkokians are now yearning for new possibilities of outdoor living space that can effectively answer to the tropical heat and its dense living condition where there is not much space for the outdoor.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

‘The Commons’, a small retail development in the city center, is an attempt to create a new active outdoor space where people can comfortably enjoy it at anytime of the year.

‘The Commons’ proposes a vertical open-air public space folding upward as a backbone of the building. It starts with ‘the Ground’ which is a landscape of steps and ramps integrated with platforms, seatings, planting and small kiosks.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

The area is well shaded by the third and the fourth floor structure above protecting the entire space from the sun and the rain. ‘The Ground’ vertically opens up through large voids on the upper floors, connecting to a large public open-air area occupying nearly thirty percent of each of the third and the fourth floor plate.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

The space vertically and horizontally flows in and out the entire building and allows for natural ventilation throughout. Two sets of industrial fans are incorporated into the ceiling screen below the skylight. One set draws hot air upward and out; the other set blows the wind downward to effectively increase the air movement in extra hot days.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

This airy semi-outdoor space is well incorporated with gardens on all levels. It becomes an active vertical urban living area. It is a place for strolling and relaxing at any time and in any seasons. ‘The Commons’ also provides a solution answering to a classic challenge of a multi-storey retail building on how to draw people upward to the upper levels.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

The wide ‘Ground’ with its gradual series of steps and platforms connecting the street level to the second floor naturally draws people to walk up leisurely. A series of openings in the third and the fourth floor further enhance a continuity of the vertical space.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

Shops on the upper levels are clearly seen from different angles from ‘the Ground’. People flow to every floor effortlessly. A building skin on the upper floors answers to another challenge. While the project wants to open up the facade for a through ventilation, the different identities of various shops on the façade would have made the building appear to be fragmented.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

The project applies a thin sheer steel mesh over the façade to partially mask off the differences among the shops providing a unified surface while allowing for visual transparency from the inside, a through ventilation, and the lightness appearance from the outside. The ceiling of ‘the Ground’ is carefully up-lighted creating a floating effect to the mass above and give a cozy atmosphere to the area.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace

The exterior light on the meshed façade fades in and out slowly. With light, the surface of the building skin comes into presence, while when the light fades away, the façade becomes transparent and briefly reveals what is inside. It feels as if the walls could breathe and the building itself is alive. Source by Department of Architecture Co., Ltd.

Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace
  • Location: Thonglor 17, Bangkok, Thailand
  • Architects: Department of Architecture
  • Principals: Amata Luphaiboon, Twitee Vajrabhaya Teparkum
  • Project Team: Chaiyapat Mirasena, Chanlika Boonpha, Matusorn Surachattumrongrat, Taraya Antarasena
  • Landscape Architect: Wabi-Sabi Studio Co., Ltd.
  • Lighting Designer: Accent Studio
  • Structural Engineer: Jet Structural
  • M&E Engineer: EEC Engineering Network
  • Identity design: TNOP Design
  • Façade Contractor: SC Glazing Co., Ltd.
  • Construction Management: International Project Administration Co., Ltd. (InterPAC)
  • Main Contractor: NL Development Public Co., Ltd.
  • Owner: The Commons Co., Ltd.
  • Area: 5,000 m2
  • Construction Cost: 180 Million THB (USD 5,200,000)
  • Year: 2016
  • Photographs: W Workspace, Ketsiree Wongwan, Courtesy of Department of Architecture
Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace
Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace
Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace
Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace
Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace
Photo © Ketsiree Wongwan / W Workspace
Level 01 Floor Plan
Level 02 Floor Plan
Section

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *