Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Valley, the MVRDV-designed mixed-use project containing apartments, shops, offices, cultural institutes, and a creative center has topped out at its highest point of 103m.
The mixed-use project recently won a 2020 International Architecture Award from The Chicago Athenaeum and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.
The dense complex was created with the aim of realizing a multifunctional building, which included a mixed program of offices, residences and amenities, covering a total floor area between 50,000m2 and 75,000m2.
Designed for EDGE Technologies, the 75,000m2 project brings much-needed greening to Amsterdam’s Zuidas business district thanks to its landscape of jagged stone terraces, bay windows, and balconies, with dense planting designed by landscape architect Piet Oudolf.
The unique appearance of the building makes Valley a striking landmark in an otherwise conventional and rather corporate business district.
The building consists of three towers, taking its name from the valley that is, as it were, carved out of the volume.
The accessible part of the valley space stretches up to the fifth floor, and will be publicly accessible via staircases that wind upwards from the ground floor.
Below the valley is the grotto, a large interior hall providing access to shops and offices, clad in natural stone and lit by two large skylights that also serve as ponds for the valley.
The outside edge of the building is wrapped in glass to fit with its context in the business district, giving the appearance that the rugged landscape in the center has been carved out of the building while affording the offices with floor-to-ceiling windows.
The apartments will have openable windows and sliding doors giving access to the terraces and balconies integrated into the stone facades.
The trees and plants, which are maintained using an automatic irrigation system, will have a positive effect on the sense of well-being of both people who live and work in the building.
In terms of sustainability, the dramatic greening and the arrangement of the terraced landscape to create optimum sunlight and daylight conditions for the apartments both contribute to the target of BREEAM-NL Excellent certification.
“Now that the highest point has been reached, it is clearly visible what Valley can be: an oasis for the Zuidas. You go from a corporate CBD, like the ones you know all over the planet, into a human and green environment, forming a literal and visual transition towards the city of tomorrow: a city that is green and accessible, dense and human,” says MVRDV founding partner Winy Maas.
“The apartments with their densely-planted terraces have a radically different appearance, smallscale and friendly; they ensure a human scale.”
Landscape architect Piet Oudolf designed all of Valley’s vegetation, focusing on a year-round green appearance.
The project derives its name from the publicly accessible terraced valley that is spread out in between its three mixed-use, towers.
As Valley nears completion, more and more tenants are being confirmed. Naturalis Biodiversity Center and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam recently teamed up with EDGE Technologies and The Why Factory, MVRDV’s think tank at TU Delft, to launch Sapiens.
Sapiens is a creative center to be used as a museum, workshop, and debate center where young people and scientists can work together on projects that improve our planet – an initiative that aligns perfectly with the objectives of the building’s design.
The building is expected to be completed in 2021.
Architects: MVRDV
Client: OVG Real Estate and EDGE Technologies
Real Estate Consultants: CBRE and Heeren Makelaars
Investor: RJB Group of Companies
General Contractors: G&S Bouw B.V. and Boele & Van Eesteren B.V.
Landscape Architects: DeltaVorm Groep and Piet Oudol