Drawing © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle
Photo © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle
Photo © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle
Photo © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle
Drawing © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle
Drawing © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle
Drawing © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle
Drawing © Sina Pauline Riedlinger , Franziska Käuferle

Ceramics - Design of a factory

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A research on contemporary use of architectural ceramics and the development of a product.

The project consists of two elements: The design of a factory building for a producer of architectural ceramics in Velten, a village in the region of Berlin, and the specific research and experimenting with the material clay and its colouring with glaze.

In the days of K. F. Schinkel architectural ceramics reached their peak with Velten as the center in Europe. The village was characterized by 43 ceramic factories and their specific typology. Today, there is only one factory left: B.O.S. Keramik Velten. Due to the recent revival of ceramics the factory is in need to expand. The task is to design a new building with an efficient production chain and a fair amount of storage space. The goals are to create an identity for the family business while learning from the characteristics of the historic factories of the area and to find a contemporary approach for the use of arch. ceramics within the design to reflect the company's standards on quality and craftsmanship.

Studying the old factories it became evident that the space defining elements of the kiln and chimney are a genetic peculiarity of the historic typology. Since a modern kiln has no specific demands on space as it is a self-contained unit there is no longer a function for the original volumes. The leading concept of the design is to integrate the explored DNA of the original kiln and regain its importance for the typology by making it the inner supporting system, daylight supply and giving it a new adequate function as an exhibition room like a cabinet of wonder. The program for the factory was developed closely with the owner. The ground floor holds two production chains, one for clay and one for glaze, each with lateral arranged niches as working stations. The first floor functions as an archive for the large collection of plaster molds and the second floor holds storage space for purchase and products. The gable walls are thought voluminous and carry functions as offices, rental workspaces and lunch room. The factory has a particular appearance and sets an iconic statement. For the facade we have a "rough surface" in mind as it is known from the long distance effect of buildings with the early use of ceramics. This quality evolves by stringing together ornaments. The plasticity of the same forms the structure and creates the desired effect. As opposed to the historic example we are not working with a defined ornament but create its plasticity in a much simpler way through a textured brick: we finish the surface of wet clay with organic materials which burn out in the process but leave their replica. All inner vertical structures show a finer finish achieved by glazed tiles. Simply put, colored glaze consists of a glass base and pigments adding the color. Nowadays, the pigments are produced industrially to ensure a perfect quality for reproduction. In our experiments we only use minerals or sand from nearby regions, in diverse grain sizes, to reintroduce chance and uncertainty into the process. Therefore, we rather work on different concepts to gain pigments than on a particular color scheme for the glaze of tiles.