Deutsche Börse
Eschborn, Germany
- Architects
- KSP ENGEL
- Location
- Eschborn, Germany
- Year
- 2010
- Client
- Lang & Groß Projektentwicklung GmbH
The new Deutsche Börse building in Eschborn can house more than 2,000 work stations. The new building, which is being erected on behalf of developers Lang & Groß Projektentwicklung GmbH, Frankfurt/Main, to designs produced by KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten, hinges on a consistent ecological concept and will meet ultramodern standards. This includes energy-saving heat recovery equipment, electricity generated by a combined heating and power system, and the use of solar power. The new headquarters for Deutsche Börse, one of the world’s largest exchange organizations, is scheduled to be commissioned in the summer of 2010. The goal is to create a building that fosters the company’s identity and is commensurate with its activities. The 87-meter-high building takes a confident place in Eschborn’s heterogeneous fabric. A regularly structured façade wraps around the two L-shaped, 23-storey sections of the building. The glass joints between the two edifices intimate the complex workings on the inside and kindle a wish even from afar to experience the special feel of the central, communicative atrium. Air walkways and bridges that link the two sections across the atrium forge numerous visual links and create spaces for informal communication. On account of its sustainability concept the building is the first highrise in Germany to be awarded LEED Platinum certification, the US Green Building Council’s highest category. The “Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design” (LEED) sustainability standard defines a number of criteria for resource-saving construction and is regarded as the established international classification system for environmentally-friendly buildings.
Floor area
78,000 sqm
Completion
07/2010
Certification
LEED Platinum
Photographer
Jean-Luc Valentin
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