Philippe Samyn: European Council Headquarter
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European Council Headquarter

Samyn and Partners Architects & Engineers | Studio Valle Progettazioni

Philippe Samyn: European Council Headquarter

As a consequence of 2004 European enlargement, the Belgian State offered the Council to cede block A from the complex “Residence Palace” to make it the future seat of both the European Council and the Council, once this building renovated and adapted to its future owners’ needs.
In other words, the Residence Palace needed to be reorganized to accommodate European Council’s quarterly sessions and EU Council’s bi-weekly ones, as well as other important conferences. It must also include rooms for the Presidency and other leaders, rooms for Member States delegates and the General Secretary of the Council, as well as international press representatives.
In this perspective, the Council launched in August 2004 a European architecture and project competition.On September 2nd 2005, the team of architects and engineers composed of Philippe Samyn and Partners (Lead and Design Partner), with Studio Valle Progettazioni and Buro Happold was designated laureate.
The Residence Palace was built between 1922 and 1927 at the initiative of the financier Lucien Kasin and designed by the Swiss architect Michel Polak. The complex is a collective housing experiment under the form of luxurious service flats located next to the city centre. The project had only a short commercial success and, after World War II, the art deco building was converted into ministerial offices by the Belgian State.
An extension with a new façade was built in the ’60, behind the original building in front of the rue de la Loi - Wetstraat.Later in the ’80, the Eastern wing was demolished in order to erect the Justus Lipsius building, current seat of the Council. The original façades, as well as the entrance halls and the corridors on the ground floor are today listed as part of the Belgian cultural heritage.
According to urban planning regulations, the building is extended on the North-East side by two new façades to transform its current “L” shape into a “cube”. This outer area is converted into a glass atrium protecting from the urban dust. It covers the principal entrance as well as a new lantern-shaped volume incorporating the conference rooms.
The shape of this volume follows the minimal required surface for each type of room.Each level of this volume has an elliptic plan with different dimensions but the same centre and the same principal axis.
The structure of this object is rigorously symmetrical although it does not appear so.
The new double façade, made of a harmonised patchwork of re used old oak windows with simple single glazing (from the different European countries) provides the necessary acoustic barrier from the traffic noise of the Rue de la Loi - Wetstraat and it also offers a first thermal insulation for the inner space. Indeed, following to UE recommendations about energy savings, many old buildings across Europe will change their window frames for double glazing in the next few years.This new façade will be both a practical and philosophical statement about the re-use of these traditional constructions elements, expressing the European diversity of cultures. Moreover, the council wishes this building to be from all points of view an example as far as sustainable development is concerned. This wish is displayed in many aspects of the architectural and technical design. As an example, an umbrella of photovoltaic panels for the electricity production covers both the new and the historical parts, which symbolizes also the link between the present, the past and the future.

Location: Bruxelles
Client: Council of the European Union
Completion: 2015
Gross Floor Area: 53.815 m2 
Architects: Philippe Samyn & Partners (Lead and Design Partners), Studio Valle Progettazioni 
Works Management: Interbuild-Cegelec 
Contractor: Riva Mariani, De Meuter, Valens-DeWaele

Consultants 
Structural: Buro Happold

Suppliers 
Kitchen: Metos, De Kobra  
Furniture: Potteau Labo

Glass: AGC

Photography: © Philippe Samyn and Partners architects & engineers, Lead and Design Partner

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