Arnhem Central Station Story by Jansen Arnhem Central Station Arnhem Central Transfer Terminal Story by UNStudio Arnhem Central Transfer Terminal

Arnhem Central Transfer Terminal

UNStudio as Architects

The future of train travel revealed as Arnhem Central Station opens after 20-year development


The new €37.5m (£27.6m) Transfer Terminal at Arnhem Central Station in the Netherlands has now completed. The station is the result of an ambitious 20-year project – masterplanned by UNStudio – to redevelop the wider station area; the largest post-war development in Arnhem. Backed by the Dutch government, this transfer hub rewrites the rulebook on train stations and is the most complex of its type in Europe. The station will become the new ‘front door’ of the city, embracing the spirit of travel, and is expected to establish Arnhem as an important node between Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium. The new terminal houses commercial areas, and a conference centre and provides links to the nearby office plaza, city centre, underground parking garage and the Park Sonsbeek. The area around the station will become a place in of itself, with 160,000m2 of offices, shops and a cinema complex.


The 21,750m2 Transfer Terminal features a dramatic twisting structural roof geometry, which enables column-free spans of up to 60m in the transfer hall. Taking references from the continuous inside/outside surface of a Klein Bottle, UNStudio aimed to blur distinctions between the inside and outside of the terminal by continuing the urban landscape into the interior of the transfer hall, where ceilings, walls and floors all seamlessly transition into one another. The structure of the roof and twisting column was only made possible by abandoning traditional construction methods and materials; much lighter steel replaced concrete – originally intended for the station – and was constructed using boat building techniques on a scale never before attempted.


Delivery of such a complex and lengthy project on time, on budget and without design compromise required the courage and determination of both the client, ProRail B.V. and the architects. It is also the result of an exceptional collaborative endeavour by the key stakeholders, ProRail, Contractor Combination Ballast Nedam – BAM, the Ministry of Infrastructure and the Arnhem City Council.


UNStudio began the masterplan in 1996 and completed its first sketch design for the Transfer Terminal back in 2000. After intensively researching passenger flows and transportation modes, UNStudio proposed that the new terminal should expand to become a ‘transfer machine’ that incorporates the whole spectrum of public transport, meeting the travel demands of the 21st century. Working with structural engineers Arup, a space without columns was produced, forming an architectural expression designed around the ways people will intuitively use the space. The station works on international, national and regional levels, allowing passengers to move between cities intuitively and with ease. This project is part of a countrywide railway upgrade that will see new stations in Rotterdam, Delft, The Hague, Breda and Utrecht. “Arnhem Central is no longer just a train station. It has become a transfer hub. We wanted to give a new and vital impetus to station design, so rather than merely designing the station around the activities and people flows that already took place there, the expanded architecture of the new Transfer Terminal directs and determines how people use and move around the building” said Ben van Berkel, founder and principal architect of UNStudio.


“To keep all stakeholders on board and on the right track during the long journey to completion was a real challenge” said Karin van Helmond, Project Manager Station Development at ProRail. “In the past twenty years many things changed in the economy, technology, politics and social environment. By focusing on our ultimate goal, the actual building of this magnificent station, we succeeded in overcoming all setbacks and risks and by working closely together we got this unprecedented job done”. Integrating the naturally sloping landscape distinctive to Arnhem, UNStudio conceived the Transfer Terminal as a flowing, utilitarian landscape of different functions stacked up to four storeys above ground and two below. The key space is the 5,355m2 main Transfer Hall, topped with a dynamic, undulating roof form.


In the development of the design, the practice used a series of conceptual structural tools to mold the geometry of the terminal landscape to accommodate the different programme functions. These include the use of ‘V-walls’, a load-bearing concrete structure that absorbs the differences in the required grids and provides daylight to the below ground levels. The spaces between these elements also form the public access from the underground car park to the other components. In 2001, Arnhem Central acquired the status from the Dutch Government as of one of the ‘New Key Projects’ (station areas of national importance). These stations should function as catalysts for urban renewal and economic growth. It is anticipated that the new Transfer Terminal, which replaces a 1950s train station, will facilitate economic growth by enabling a vastly increased daily passenger flow to the city of 110,000 commuters per day in 2020.


Arnhem Central Station

Jansen as Suppliers

On November 19, 2015 Arnhem Central Station was officially opened.


The complex consists of a station, a bus terminal, underground parking, two office towers and public space.


Characteristic of the design are the undulating topography of the landscape and the equally spectacular forms of public transport terminal, where the constructive twist directly behind the entrance is the absolute eye-catcher.


The steel Jansen VISS curtain wall systems feature prominently in this building and play a significant role in terms of transparency and security.

ARNHEM CENTRAL MASTERPLAN AND TRAIN STATION

LAVA Architects as Architects

The Arnhem Central project is a large urban plan development composed of diverse elements that, amassed, constitute a vibrant transport hub. The expansion generates office space, shops, housing units, a new station hall, a railway platform and underpass, a car tunnel, bicycle storage and a large car park.


A project with such an intricate set of requirements necessitates a methodological approach that can accommodate the hybrid nature of the development. The dynamic nature of the planning process allows the locus to fuse elements of time, occupant trajectories and program into an efficient and integral system. Housed under a continuous roof element it constitutes one of the main thresholds of Arnhem, its architecture adding to the iconography of the city.


The two Park and Rijn office towers are components of the large urban plan development for Arnhem Central. Visibly recognisable on the horizon, they denote the city’s transportation hub as well as assimilating some of the public functions of the transfer hall at ground level. The two distinct volumes create a void between them, thereby avoiding the complete severance of the visual connection between north and south.

ARNHEM CENTRAAL

Balmond Studio as Architects

Arnhem Centraal is a seamless response using horizontal layers and vertical trajectories that weave into one monumental cross-stitching. Structure is flow. In a free almost biological sense, far removed from the constraints of traditional form-making, layering and folding take over and the concerns of a Newtonian mechanics fall away. Using a loop in space, ranging in width, a flow of other vertical loops begin to form a single trace, becoming the structural diagram for this mixed development project of offices, railway station hall and basement car park. The trace leaps across the station hall area and folds into curved surfaces before straightening out again into the horizontals of the office floors. This weave transforms to a tectonic form, merging on plan and climbing into a vertical warp.

OV-terminal Arnhem

Concrete Valley as Concrete roof

Over 1500 unique curved concrete elements, does that sound challenging? Not to us! May we introduce you to an award-winning project? The OV Terminal Arnhem was designed by architect Ben van Berkel (UNStudio) and won both the Dutch Concrete Award in 2015 and the European Concrete Award 2016. The innovative roof panels are double-bended precast elements, produced using specially designed flexible concrete and flexible moulds. Re-using the moulds increased efficiency and reduced costs. All 1500 elements are one-of-a-kind and together form a unique curved rooftop.

Project Credits
Suppliers
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Concrete roof
Products used in this project
Product Spec Sheet

ElementBrandProduct name
SuppliersJansen
Concrete roofConcrete Valley
outdoor lightingsetga
Product Spec Sheet
Concrete roof
outdoor lighting
by setga
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