LAVA’s Y–shaped Sports Youth Hostel opens

Sports Youth Hostel
Photo © Häfele

It’s the new generation of youth hostels – innovative, integrative and international – and has recently opened in Bayreuth, Germany. The fluid structure is integrated into the landscape, with contemporary materials and holistic sustainability – a place for active people of all abilities. LAVA’s concept for the sports hostel is:

Photo © Häfele

1. Innovative – inventive new spatial configuration of the whole facility, including individual room modules, material use and design
2. Integrated – inclusive ‘barrier-free’ building, with sporting areas merging directly with the building, and accessible spaces, facilities and grounds
3. International – the design from creates a feeling of place and combines it with contemporary elements Bayreuth’s global partner cities.

Photo © Häfele

Tobias Wallisser, LAVA director, said: “LAVA chose a ‘Y’ shape for the 180-bed hostel because it cleverly generates a connective central space and interweaves the interior and exterior spaces, offering expansive views and multiple accessible openings to the sports fields and gardens.” The rooms, grounds and facilities are all fully accessible and especially equipped for active people of all abilities.

Photo © Häfele

A whole wheelchair basketball team can stay here. Fourteen rooms on the ground floor are wheelchair accessible by lift or ramps, and there are walk-in showers, wheelchair-accessible sinks, more space and technical aids. Doors, terraces, sports and parking areas are accessible and there are customised way-finding systems with strong graphics.

Photo © Häfele

Inclusion is also seen in the staffing with about one third of employees having disabilities. The guest room typology is new – LAVA designed an intelligent wall system with modular contemporary custom built-in furniture – toilets, showers as well as bed niches. These three-dimensional wall modules facilitate different room configurations through partially rotatable beds creating two, four and six-bed rooms.

Photo © Häfele

They maximise room usage for a broad range of guests – from individuals to families to wheelchair teams.The multipurpose central atrium is a surprising element with its play of materials and colours. It fulfills the youth hostel motto ‘Experience the Community’ serving as a hub for (digital) entertainment, interaction and communication.

Photo © Häfele

The amphitheatre in the middle is lit by a skylight above and connects to the different levels in a playful way, whilst giving horizontal and diagonal sightlines guiding visitors through the building. Reception, seminar rooms, bistro, kitchen, sports and game facilities are spread out over two floors and connected to each other via this central atrium.

Photo © Häfele

Each wing of the Y has access to the exterior at its end, and many ‘loops’ combining inside and outside come together at the central point of the Y. Parts of the building double as grandstands for cultural events and encourage community interaction. Terraces allow direct access to the green fields and sports areas of the ground floor zone, all accessible.

Photo © Häfele

Another feature is no fake surfaces, just authentic materials – wood looks like wood. Much of the structure, including wooden trusses, is exposed, giving a ‘raw’ space. The wood, concrete floors and ceilings create an industrial robustness with brightly coloured infills and strong graphics referencing sports activities or natural elements like tree canopies. Using local materials and techniques there is a focus on solidity and functionality rather than relying on the latest technology.

Photo © Häfele

Holistic sustainability includes environmental – local materials, highly insulated facades, renewable energy, pollution reduction etc. But it also includes social and structural sustainability. Universal design allows everyone to work and to stay and integration sees more potential users, resulting in optimum use of the
facility. Source by LAVA

Photo © Robert Pupeter
  • Location: Bayreuth, Germany
  • Architect: LAVA (Laboratory for Visionary Architecture) with WENZEL + WENZEL
  • LAVA: Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck, Chris Bosse
  • Project Team: Julian Fahrenkamp (PL), Angelika Hermann, Jan Kozerski, Mikolay Scibisz, Nicola Schunter, Paula Gonzalez, Güley Alagöz, Elise Elsacker, Myung Lee, Yuan Ma
  • Structural planning: Engelsmann Peters, Stuttgart
  • Building services: IBT.PAN, Berlin
  • Fire protection: Bau.art, Munich
  • Kitchen planning: b.o.b
  • Wayfinding: Space Agency, London
  • Client: Bavarian Youth Hostel Association
  • Program: Sports Youth Hostel with 45 rooms, 180 beds, dining room, seminar rooms and sports facilities
  • Area: 3.800m2 BGF
  • Cost: 10m euro
  • Year: 2018
  • Photographs: Häfele, Studio Huber / DJH, Robert Pupeter, Courtesy of LAVA
Ground Floor Plan
Perspective Section
Perspective Section
Diagram
Diagram

Leave a Reply

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