Matrix ONE
Serving as the main hub of the Matrix Innovation Center, this six-storey, 13,000-square-metre laboratory and office building provides the campus with key social spaces and amenities. Crucially, Matrix ONE also pushes the envelope in sustainable design: from demountable construction, the “social stairs”, and solar energy generation to smart lighting and generous amounts of bicycle parking, it incorporates sustainable thinking from every possible angle. Matrix ONE meets ambitious Amsterdam targets for energy use and is certified BREEAM-Excellent.
- Location
- Netherlands
- City
- Amsterdam
- Year
- 2023
- Surface
- 13000 m²
- Client
- Matrix Innovation Center
- Status
- Realised
- Programmes
- Educational , Offices , Bar-restaurant
- Themes
- Architecture , Sustainability , NEXT
Matrix ONE is the largest of seven buildings that now make up the Matrix Innovation Center, part of Amsterdam Science Park, where scientists and entrepreneurs work on sustainable solutions for current and future problems. Matrix One itself contains a mixture of science laboratories and offices for tech companies including Qualcomm, while other tenants including the University of Amsterdam's SustainaLab, Photanol, Skytree, and the startup FUL Foods also work in Matrix ONE to develop technologies for a sustainable future.
As the main building of the Matrix Innovation Center, Matrix One aims to be a sustainable example for the other buildings in Amsterdam Science Park and beyond. The building is designed to be demountable. Simple connections such as screws and bolts allow elements to be detached and reused when various parts of the building are updated; even the building’s floors are made using prefabricated concrete slabs with no fixed connections, allowing them to be reused at the end of the building’s lifespan. The platform Madaster provides a comprehensive material passport system to give insight into the materials and products used and the CO2 storage for over 120,000 individual components. As a result, over 90% of the building’s materials can be reused again later.
On the roof, 1,000 square metres of solar panels generate a portion of the building’s energy, while internet-connected lighting and heating fixtures help to reduce energy consumption (power for critical lab equipment runs on a separate circuit). With this combination of energy generation and reduced energy consumption, the building itself produces a significant proportion of the energy it consumes, and therefore meets the ambitious Amsterdam targets for energy performance.
As the main building of the Matrix Innovation Center, Matrix ONE serves as the social hub of the campus. A key element of MVRDV’s design is the large “social staircase” immediately next to the main entrance on the building’s southern corner, which is conceptualised as a continuation of the zig-zagging paths that are found throughout the campus. With tribune-style seating for presentations, tables for informal meetings, and coffee stations, these stairs bring together workers from different industries, allowing them to mingle and share ideas. The interior design for this space, developed by MVRDV in collaboration with up architecture, includes multiple lush green walls that are visible through the glass façade, while soft felt finishes elsewhere dramatically reduce sound reverberation, lending the social spaces a calm and intimate atmosphere.
This social staircase is complemented by the building’s amenities, with a ground floor restaurant and a bar at the top of the staircase. These social features form “Club Matrix”, available for use by workers from all of the surrounding Matrix buildings. The building also includes an 100-seat auditorium, confirming Matrix ONE as a central hub for the creation and sharing of knowledge.
“Matrix ONE offered an excellent opportunity for us to test a number of the carbon-reduction strategies we have long been investigating at MVRDV”, says MVRDV partner Frans de Witte. “The building is state-of-the-art now, but it also acknowledges that the state-of-the-art is constantly changing. So we made both the interior spaces and the technical installations that serve them as flexible as possible; offices can easily be modified to become labs and vice versa, and labs can be easily upgraded with new systems to accommodate changing standards. In the decades to come when the building is no longer cutting-edge, it will become a source to harvest materials from for other buildings. In the future, we hope this is how all buildings will work – and we’re excited to see Matrix ONE become a standard-bearer in our own office.”
Matrix ONE also encourages users to lead a healthy lifestyle: the location of the social stair encourages people to use the stairs instead of the elevators, which are found deeper inside the building, accessed via the atrium. On the rear of the building, a secondary entrance includes access to a bicycle parking facility that is directly accessible and visible from the atrium, encouraging those who work in the building to cycle instead of driving. As a result of all of these sustainability and health measures, the building has received BREEAM-Excellent certification.
Gallery
© Daria Scagliola
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Demountable components
Demountable components
Credits
- Architect
- Partner
- Design Team
- Visualisations
- Partners
- Contractor:
- De Vries en Verburg
- Project coordination:
- Stone 22
- Landscape architect:
- Karres+Brands
- Gemeente Amsterdam
- Structural engineer:
- IMD
- MEP, Building physics:
- Deerns
- Cost calculation:
- IGG
- Environmental advisor:
- ATKB
- Interior architect:
- MVRDV
- UP Architecture
- Photographs:
- © Daria Scagliola