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Purpose

This paper shares the experience of developing and designing two adjacent projects, Patch22 and Top-Up, in Amsterdam using Open Building principles. It discusses the architectural, technical and legal challenges and opportunities encountered, as well as the influence of economic and legal factors on future adaptability.

Design/methodology/approach

By analyzing and comparing Patch22 and Top-Up, this paper identifies the principles necessary for implementing Open Building in practice.

Findings

The adaptability of buildings to future uses largely depends on legally ensuring flexible principles before the initial delivery and sale. While technical Open Building principles are relatively easy to integrate, this paper offers technical and architectural recommendations for their implementation.

Social implications

Since the designers of the buildings are also the initiators and real-estate developers of the buildings, this paper provides insights into the technical, architectural, legal and economic conditions for successfully implementing Open Building principles.

Originality/value

Patch22 and Top-Up exemplify the revival of Open Building principles in the Netherlands (2010–2020), demonstrating the ambition of a multidisciplinary team to create reusable buildings. This paper shares the successes and challenges faced in contemporary building practice.

Patch22 [1] and Top-Up [2] are two buildings based on John Habraken’s “Open Building” principles (Habraken, 1961), designed by FRANTZEN et al. and developed and realized by Lemniskade BV in the Buiksloterham district, a former industrial area in the northern port of Amsterdam in the Netherlands, during the period 2009–2020.

Lemniskade BV was founded in 2009 by building manager Claus Oussoren and architect Tom Frantzen out of frustration with the fact that, in the first decade of this century, investors and developers hardly initiated any projects in which integral sustainability was the starting point. During the 2008–2014 credit crunch, clients in the Netherlands became even more conservative and affordability became the most important criterion. In response, Oussoren and Frantzen decided to take matters into their own hands, founding project development company Lemniskade Projecten and to participate in a tender from the City of Amsterdam for the construction of a sustainable residential building. This eventually became Patch22. During the construction of Patch22, Lemniskade also managed to acquire the adjacent lot, on which Top-Up was completed in 2020.

Patch22 and Top-Up (Figure 1) are right next to each other on the shore of the Johan van Hasselt canal and have the same program; commercial spaces on the first floor with live-work apartments on top. The buildings also share great similarities in size and materials; both buildings have an area of about 5,000 m2 and have a hybrid wood–concrete load-bearing structure. The facades of both buildings consist of the same material palette; pre-grayed and preserved softwood combined with wood-aluminum window frames and coarse concrete stucco. Architecturally, both buildings consist of a plinth layer of concrete with a loose stack of wooden volumes on top. FRANTZEN et al. often describe Patch22 and Top-Up as a “married couple”; two inseparable individuals with different DNA (storey heights, dimensions and proportions), with similar standards and values (flexibility and durability) and over time the same gray colors.

Figure 1
A photograph shows modern waterfront buildings reflected in a calm canal under a partly cloudy sky.The photograph presents a contemporary urban waterfront scene with several mid-rise modern buildings arranged around a narrow canal. In the foreground on the right, a dark-clad building with large glass windows reveals interior furnishings and plants, while on the left a floating or waterside structure with terraces and greenery sits directly over the water. The canal runs through the center, creating clear reflections of the buildings and sky on its surface. In the background, multiple office-style buildings with grid-like facades and geometric exterior elements rise behind a paved open plaza. Patches of vegetation line the canal edges, and bicycles are visible near the plaza. The sky is partly cloudy with soft evening or morning light illuminating the architecture, emphasizing the clean lines and reflective glass surfaces.

Patch22 vs Top-Up. Patch22 (completed 2016) on the left and Top-Up (completed 2020) on the right by Lemniskade/FRANTZEN et al. In the foreground project “Schoon Schip (Better Boats),” a collection of sustainable houseboats by Space&Matter Architects. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

Figure 1
A photograph shows modern waterfront buildings reflected in a calm canal under a partly cloudy sky.The photograph presents a contemporary urban waterfront scene with several mid-rise modern buildings arranged around a narrow canal. In the foreground on the right, a dark-clad building with large glass windows reveals interior furnishings and plants, while on the left a floating or waterside structure with terraces and greenery sits directly over the water. The canal runs through the center, creating clear reflections of the buildings and sky on its surface. In the background, multiple office-style buildings with grid-like facades and geometric exterior elements rise behind a paved open plaza. Patches of vegetation line the canal edges, and bicycles are visible near the plaza. The sky is partly cloudy with soft evening or morning light illuminating the architecture, emphasizing the clean lines and reflective glass surfaces.

Patch22 vs Top-Up. Patch22 (completed 2016) on the left and Top-Up (completed 2020) on the right by Lemniskade/FRANTZEN et al. In the foreground project “Schoon Schip (Better Boats),” a collection of sustainable houseboats by Space&Matter Architects. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

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The floors of both buildings are divided into more legal units – condominium rights – than there are apartments, where owners could combine a single or several condominium rights into an apartment of the desired size. Both buildings offer many spatial and technical possibilities to make adjustments within their own apartments: the floorplan layout, the installations and the drainage pipes are all flexible. Yet, in addition to the many similarities, there are also major technical, architectural and legal differences.

The context (time, economy, society) in which the buildings were designed and realized shows great differences. This is remarkable, to say the least, since the buildings were developed almost sequentially. Patch22’s development began in 2009; Top-Up’s in 2014 (while the construction of Patch22 was in progress). To get a grip on the influence of economic conditions (and subsequent legal implications) on the development of both buildings, the development trajectory of both buildings is described in chronology.

Habraken’s primary motivation was to enhance inhabitant involvement in the design and realization of their homes and living environments. His Open Building principles were applied on a large scale in 1977 by architect Frans van der Werf in the Molenvliet housing project in Papendrecht, where 123 dwellings were developed according to Habraken’s “support and infill” concept.

“Molenvliet was developed through a participatory, bottom-up process in which Van der Werf held consultation sessions with all stakeholders, including each future inhabitant, to discuss individual wishes and housing needs. These conversations were incorporated into the final design, resulting in no two dwellings being exactly the same (Manuela, 2023).”

This project drew the attention of Frank Bijdendijk (Bijdendijk, 2006), a young developer who became director of the Amsterdam housing association Het Oosten in 1982. Bijdendijk observed that, although housing associations typically built standardized dwellings, inhabitants frequently modified them during occupancy. This revealed a fundamental need to adapt living spaces to personal lifestyles rather than conform lifestyles to fixed architectural typologies. He recognized this phenomenon in the Molenvliet project, where variation among units was intrinsic to the design. His conviction that inhabitants could take responsibility for their own “infill” was further reinforced in 1987 when Het Oosten acquired the Tetterode complex, occupied by squatters at the time. While the corporation refurbished the building’s exterior, it deliberately left the interior design and construction to the new tenants, thereby formalizing their autonomous approach to living.

In 2011, Bijdendijk implemented these ideas in two “Solid” buildings in Amsterdam, designed by Tony Fretton and Baumschlager Eberle (Mensink, 2013). In the “Solids,” the separation between “support” and “infill” was implemented in a particularly clear and deliberate manner. Het Oosten built the support structure while inhabitants could decide how much space to rent, how to program that space, build the infill themselves and even influence rental prices through a competitive bidding process.

Whereas Habraken arrived at the “support–infill” distinction through a critique of the technocratic logic of Mass Housing, Bijdendijk arrived at a similar conclusion from a user-centered perspective, grounded in his real-life observation of how inhabitants continuously adapted their living environments.

Architect Tom Frantzen arrived at the same “support–infill” principle in the development of Patch22 and Top-Up. His motivation, however, was not rooted in critique of contemporary mass housing production nor in inhabitant empowerment but primarily in the pursuit of sustainability. Frantzen observed that, starting in the 1990s, large-scale housing projects in Amsterdam were being demolished because their limited usage possibilities no longer aligned with contemporary needs (The Bijlmer housing project as an example). He realized that a truly sustainable building would never meet the fate of demolition. To create buildings that can last forever, Frantzen designed his projects as buildings with a built-in capacity for change: incorporating the ability to adapt to unknown functions and unknown future inhabitants, allowing for continuous transformation over time.

In doing so, Frantzen aligned closely with Stephen Kendall’s concept of Open Building as an approach to sustainable architecture (Kendall, 1999). Kendall emphasized that this requires more than a shift in the architect’s attitude and skill set; it also necessitates changes to legal, regulatory and financial frameworks. The projects Patch22 and Top-Up offer concrete examples of how legal, regulatory, technical and financial frameworks have directly influenced the way Open Building principles were implemented.

Patch22 was designed in the period 2009–2013 and built in the period December 2014–January 2016. The plot on which Patch22 was built was offered to the market by the municipality through a tender in which market parties were invited to make a proposal for the site. The special feature of this tender was that selection was not based on the financial bidding by market parties but on the sustainability scores of the design. The leasehold of the lot was fixed as a “lump sum” with no financial corrections based on the actually realized or alternative future program.

Normally, Amsterdam corrects the leasehold when the program changes. This is because Amsterdam owns most of the land within the municipality and applies a “leasehold system” in which the user of the plot pays the municipality a rental fee based on functional use for the land while the building is developed and built at the developer’s expense and risk and the real estate property remains in private ownership.

Municipal leasehold prices vary based on functional use, with residential functions typically costing more than commercial ones in recent decades. When a building’s function changes, the leasehold is adjusted accordingly, which can create a financial barrier for future reuse of the building.

This was not the case with Patch22. In the tender submission for the lot, Lemniskade BV and FRANTZEN et al. designed a highly energy-efficient building that achieved top sustainability scores, winning the tender. Additionally, FRANTZEN et al. made sure the building could easily adapt in the future, allowing floors to switch between housing and office use. Because this flexibility was integral to the tender, it was contractually stipulated that future changes in use would not affect the leasehold, which was set at a lump sum of €1,900,000 in the tender.

In Patch22, all future uses allowed by the zoning plan can be realized without adjusting the leasehold. The tender entry did not specify which functions would go where in the building, but rather how uses could change over time. Normally in the Netherlands, buildings are divided into separate condominium rights with specific functions. However, Patch22 contractually established that each condominium right can accommodate multiple functions, both residential and commercial, ensuring flexible use in the future.

In addition to the fact that a lump sum was set for the leasehold and a flexible programmatic layout was an integral part of the tender submission, it was crucial for the success of the design’s flexible layout that the building was developed during the economic credit crunch of 2008–2014.

During this period, very few buildings were developed in Amsterdam, which gave the involved municipal officials plenty of time to work with Lemniskade and FRANTZEN et al. to figure out how to contractually establish the desired flexibility in layout, both for the present and the future, in the division deed and the leasehold contract. As briefly mentioned above, this was not typical for the municipality of Amsterdam.

Top-Up was designed between 2014 and 2018 and built from November 2018 to February 2020. After 2014, the Dutch economy quickly recovered from the previous economic crisis. The Amsterdam housing market changed rapidly and projects sprung up everywhere. Developers seized every opportunity to acquire sites, and contractors worked overtime to meet demand, causing both housing prices and construction costs to skyrocket.

In 2014, the municipality of Amsterdam lacked sufficient staff to intensively manage every development initiative. Therefore, municipal officials were reluctant to make extra efforts when drafting the necessary leasehold contracts and division deeds and deviating contract forms were rejected. This meant that projects had to be designed as “normally” as possible, and the flexibility and adaptability of buildings were no longer seen as a desirable extra sustainability quality but as an unwanted administrative burden.

The leasehold negotiations for Top-Up also differed from Patch22. While Patch22 was a public tender with a fixed leasehold lumpsum, Top-Up was a private transformation project. During the construction of Patch22, Lemniskade managed to acquire the adjacent plot and building from the previous owner. The site contained an industrial building, once a storage and testing facility for the national telephone company PTT, where trans-Atlantic telephone cables were tested before being loaded onto ships and installed on the seafloor.

When purchasing the building, Lemniskade also acquired the right and obligation to lease the underlying plot from the municipality. The lease at the time of purchase was based on the building’s previous function. Lemniskade then developed a transformation proposal in which the existing building was partially demolished and topped up (hence the name Top-Up) with seven floors of mixed-use apartments. This required the leasehold to be adjusted from €483.000, to €4.864.000, as the use of the plot would change due to the transformation. Due to under-staffing in municipal services, officials insisted that this be done in the most “normal” (and thus time-saving) way, without incorporating future flexibility into the renewed leasehold contract.

However, due to Lemniskade’s and FRANTZEN et al.'s sustainability ambitions, there was a desire to make Top-Up suitable for an unknown future use. While this was an integral part of the sustainability vision that helped win the tender for Patch22, this desire for future adaptability had to be achieved without the cooperation of the municipal government for Top-Up.

The book Cradle to Cradle (McDonough and Braungart, 2002) advocates for eliminating waste by closing the material “loop,” ensuring that products are continuously reused rather than discarded. It inspired the circular design of Patch22 and Top-Up, where wood as a renewable building material is central. Wood grows back during the building’s lifespan, contributing to a circular system. However, sustainability goes beyond energy efficiency, which Patch22 was evaluated on in the tender, and circular material choice: Buildings that are easily adaptable – like the 450-year-old canal houses in the heart of Amsterdam (Figure 2) – tend to remain in use for much longer. As a result, the turnover time of their building materials within the cradle to(ooooooooooooooo) cradle loop is significantly extended. In a similar spirit, Patch22 and Top-Up have been designed with flexible drainage and installation systems that allow for easy replacement or adjustment. This adaptability supports a longer functional lifespan and contributes to a durable circular built environment.

Figure 2
A photograph shows colorful canal-side townhouses reflected in rippling water at dusk.The photograph shows a row of narrow, multi-story historic townhouses lined up along a canal, viewed straight on from across the water. The buildings vary in color and facade style, including dark brown, gray, patterned black-and-white, tan, red, black, and cream exteriors, each with tall rectangular windows arranged in vertical rows. Many windows are lit from inside, casting warm yellow and orange light. A small white boat rests against the canal wall beneath one of the darker buildings near the center-right. The canal occupies the lower half of the image, with gentle ripples reflecting the illuminated windows and building colors. The sky above is pale blue, suggesting early evening. Decorative rooflines and gables top several buildings, and the tightly packed structures create a continuous waterfront streetscape.

Amsterdam City Centre. The 450-year-old canal houses in Amsterdam’s UNESCO World Heritage center exemplify how adaptability leads to a slower turnover of materials, thereby contributing to sustainability. Source: Photo courtesy of pexels.com (copyrightfree use)

Figure 2
A photograph shows colorful canal-side townhouses reflected in rippling water at dusk.The photograph shows a row of narrow, multi-story historic townhouses lined up along a canal, viewed straight on from across the water. The buildings vary in color and facade style, including dark brown, gray, patterned black-and-white, tan, red, black, and cream exteriors, each with tall rectangular windows arranged in vertical rows. Many windows are lit from inside, casting warm yellow and orange light. A small white boat rests against the canal wall beneath one of the darker buildings near the center-right. The canal occupies the lower half of the image, with gentle ripples reflecting the illuminated windows and building colors. The sky above is pale blue, suggesting early evening. Decorative rooflines and gables top several buildings, and the tightly packed structures create a continuous waterfront streetscape.

Amsterdam City Centre. The 450-year-old canal houses in Amsterdam’s UNESCO World Heritage center exemplify how adaptability leads to a slower turnover of materials, thereby contributing to sustainability. Source: Photo courtesy of pexels.com (copyrightfree use)

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The Slimline floor [3] on a laminated wood post-beam structure with CLT side walls and a concrete stability core (Figure 3).

Figure 3
A diagram shows a floor and partition wall construction section with an installation cavity and detailed dimensions.The diagram presents a vertical construction section through a floor and partition wall junction, illustrating a hollow slimline floor system detailing integrated services. At the top left, a note titled “Floor construction” lists “20 millimeters floor finishing (by buyer), 70 millimeters screed with underfloor heating, Lewis floor, 15 millimeters acoustic separation, slimline structural floor”. The floor buildup is shown horizontally on both the left and right sides of a central dividing wall. A label at the upper right reads “disconnect floor section at dividing wall”. At the center is a division wall identified by text: “division wall 60 minutes per sound insulation value R a greater than 62 decibels. Drawing shows 215 millimeters Gyproc SoundBloc Wall 191 with 15-millimeter gap, construction and connections as per supplier”. The wall consists of two framed stud assemblies with cross-hatched insulation infill and plasterboard linings on each face. Horizontal dimension callouts at mid-height show 100 millimeters to the left and 100 millimeters to the right of the central cavity, with 15 millimeters at the center, giving an overall wall thickness of 215 millimeters. A lower horizontal dimension string reads, from left to right, “117.5, 215, 117.5”, spanning the full width beneath the wall. Between the upper and lower floor slabs is a large vertically hatched rectangular zone labeled in bold: “INSTALLATION, DUCTS, PIPING and WIRING CAVITY”, indicating the service void. This cavity spans the full width between apartments and vertically connects the upper and lower floor assemblies. At the top of this cavity, a horizontal dimension of 370 millimeters is shown across the wall base, with additional dimensions of 40 millimeters at both sides, left and right. Small filled circular symbols appear along the base of the wall at this level, indicating fixing or support points. On the right side of the cavity, a small note marks “fire seal” at the slab penetration. Vertical level markers on the right show “FLOOR LEVEL” at the top, with stacked vertical dimensions including 70 millimeters (screed), 15 millimeters (acoustic separation), and a larger overall vertical dimension labeled 433 millimeters above the cavity and 518 millimeters spanning from floor level down toward the service zone (units implied as millimeters). On the left side, additional vertical dimensions are provided: 193 millimeters extending downward from the slab into the upper portion of the cavity, and a larger dimension of approximately 604 millimeters running from near the top of the cavity to its lower edge. These measurements are shown with arrows indicating their top-to-bottom extents. Below the service cavity, the same Gyproc SoundBloc division wall configuration repeats, with mirrored stud framing and cross-hatched insulation. Structural slabs are depicted as solid gray layers with aggregate texture, while the Lewis sheet floor system is drawn in bold lines within the screed layer above. A small “3” dimension appears near the lower wall base, indicating a minor clearance or joint thickness at the bottom connection. At the bottom center, beneath the lower wall assembly, a circular “A S” marker is shown, indicating the referenced detail location. The drawing also includes multiple small solid circular markers at wall–floor interfaces, representing connection or bearing points. Overall, the figure documents acoustic and fire-rated separation between apartments, the 215-millimeter central partition, the vertically continuous services cavity, and the layered floor construction with integrated radiant heating, with dimensions annotated across left, right, center, top, and bottom to clarify wall thicknesses, cavity height, slab offsets, and floor buildup.

Floor and partition wall detailing Patch22. Hollow Slimline floor system with free positioning of drains and wiring. The (drawn in bold lines) Lewis sheet with screed layer and integrated radiant heating is installed by the private contractor of the individual buyers. In this detailing, the legal separation between the upper and lower apartments is unclear. Source: Created by authors

Figure 3
A diagram shows a floor and partition wall construction section with an installation cavity and detailed dimensions.The diagram presents a vertical construction section through a floor and partition wall junction, illustrating a hollow slimline floor system detailing integrated services. At the top left, a note titled “Floor construction” lists “20 millimeters floor finishing (by buyer), 70 millimeters screed with underfloor heating, Lewis floor, 15 millimeters acoustic separation, slimline structural floor”. The floor buildup is shown horizontally on both the left and right sides of a central dividing wall. A label at the upper right reads “disconnect floor section at dividing wall”. At the center is a division wall identified by text: “division wall 60 minutes per sound insulation value R a greater than 62 decibels. Drawing shows 215 millimeters Gyproc SoundBloc Wall 191 with 15-millimeter gap, construction and connections as per supplier”. The wall consists of two framed stud assemblies with cross-hatched insulation infill and plasterboard linings on each face. Horizontal dimension callouts at mid-height show 100 millimeters to the left and 100 millimeters to the right of the central cavity, with 15 millimeters at the center, giving an overall wall thickness of 215 millimeters. A lower horizontal dimension string reads, from left to right, “117.5, 215, 117.5”, spanning the full width beneath the wall. Between the upper and lower floor slabs is a large vertically hatched rectangular zone labeled in bold: “INSTALLATION, DUCTS, PIPING and WIRING CAVITY”, indicating the service void. This cavity spans the full width between apartments and vertically connects the upper and lower floor assemblies. At the top of this cavity, a horizontal dimension of 370 millimeters is shown across the wall base, with additional dimensions of 40 millimeters at both sides, left and right. Small filled circular symbols appear along the base of the wall at this level, indicating fixing or support points. On the right side of the cavity, a small note marks “fire seal” at the slab penetration. Vertical level markers on the right show “FLOOR LEVEL” at the top, with stacked vertical dimensions including 70 millimeters (screed), 15 millimeters (acoustic separation), and a larger overall vertical dimension labeled 433 millimeters above the cavity and 518 millimeters spanning from floor level down toward the service zone (units implied as millimeters). On the left side, additional vertical dimensions are provided: 193 millimeters extending downward from the slab into the upper portion of the cavity, and a larger dimension of approximately 604 millimeters running from near the top of the cavity to its lower edge. These measurements are shown with arrows indicating their top-to-bottom extents. Below the service cavity, the same Gyproc SoundBloc division wall configuration repeats, with mirrored stud framing and cross-hatched insulation. Structural slabs are depicted as solid gray layers with aggregate texture, while the Lewis sheet floor system is drawn in bold lines within the screed layer above. A small “3” dimension appears near the lower wall base, indicating a minor clearance or joint thickness at the bottom connection. At the bottom center, beneath the lower wall assembly, a circular “A S” marker is shown, indicating the referenced detail location. The drawing also includes multiple small solid circular markers at wall–floor interfaces, representing connection or bearing points. Overall, the figure documents acoustic and fire-rated separation between apartments, the 215-millimeter central partition, the vertically continuous services cavity, and the layered floor construction with integrated radiant heating, with dimensions annotated across left, right, center, top, and bottom to clarify wall thicknesses, cavity height, slab offsets, and floor buildup.

Floor and partition wall detailing Patch22. Hollow Slimline floor system with free positioning of drains and wiring. The (drawn in bold lines) Lewis sheet with screed layer and integrated radiant heating is installed by the private contractor of the individual buyers. In this detailing, the legal separation between the upper and lower apartments is unclear. Source: Created by authors

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In Patch22, no vertical shafts are placed in the residential apartments. The vertical shafts are located in the common central core of the building. To reach the vertical shaft from every position in each apartment with the required toilet drainage, a significant sloping angle (0.5 cm/m) is needed (in the Netherlands, a natural slope is typically used for drainage systems and pressurized systems are uncommon). In a conventional floor structure in the Netherlands, these pipes would be embedded in a (very inflexible!) concrete floor, which would become inefficiently high due to the required internal sloping angle of the drains.

Therefore, Patch22 opted for the Slimline floor, developed at the Eindhoven University of Technology. It is a combination of an 8 cm thick concrete slab topped with 36 cm high perforated steel beams. Drains and wiring can be installed between and through these beams.

The floor is sealed with a Lewis sheet, a folded steel sheet, with an 8 cm thick screed layer in which water-based radiant heating pipes are embedded. Because it is easy to saw holes in the screed and the Lewis sheet, and because these can also be easily repaired (both now and in the future, as it is not a complex construction system), changes to the piping system in the floor are easy to implement. This allows for easy future alterations to the floor plan layout.

However, this floor construction also had an unexpected disadvantage in legal terms. In an apartment building, the floor serves as both a structural and legal boundary between two apartments. According to building regulations, the floor must provide a certain level of soundproofing between apartments located one above the other. However, since the floor contains a hollow space with accessible drains and wiring, the question arises as to where the legal boundary is located inside the floor and which part of the floor the soundproofing requirements apply to.

The hollow Slimline floor creates a legal gray area, as it is unclear who is responsible in case of soundproofing problems. Due to the lack of mass in the floor, this system is also prone to soundproofing problems if construction errors are made at the joints between floors and walls. These two issues led to different choices being made for the floor design in Top-Up.

A DIY floor on the CD20 construction system [4] with a concrete stability core (Figure 4).

Figure 4
A diagram shows a floor and partition wall section with an installation cavity and a legal boundary between apartments.The diagram presents a vertical construction section through a floor and partition wall junction, illustrating a hollow floor system with integrated services and a centrally aligned acoustic partition. At the center of the drawing, a vertically continuous partition wall is shown with framed stud construction and cross-hatched insulation infill on both sides. Near the upper portion of the wall, a circular marker labeled “A S” appears on the centerline. Small filled circular symbols are distributed along the wall, indicating fixing or connection points. On the upper right side, a text block for the vertical hatching support at the corner between the vertical and horizontal segments reads: “partition wall to be installed by contractor: division wall 60 minutes per sound insulation value R a greater than 62 decibels. Drawing shows 215-millimeter Gyproc SoundBloc Wall 191 with 15-millimeter gap, construction and connections as per supplier”. Below this, additional notes state: “to be installed by buyer: Optional skirting board at least 1 millimeter away from the top of the screed or seal the space between skirting board and screed with rubber tape or a sealant seam”. A further note reads: “to be installed by buyer: 8-millimeter Mycofoam or similar; Miolok F K 8-millimeter by 100-millimeter, article number 8720801050 via meeu wissen dot n l”. On the upper left side, a detailed material list titled “Hollow floor to be installed by buyer:” specifies the layered buildup as follows: “20 millimeters floor finish in accordance with requirements of subdivision deed and by-laws”, “10 millimeters gypsum fiber board”, “25 millimeters gypsum fiberboard E 22 with underfloor heating milled out”, “18 millimeters underlayment”, “Wooden beams 44 millimeters wide and 70 millimeters high 600 millimeter centres (beam is higher on first floor)”, “FIX PLUS R-circled Beam Support B S W 60-04 Adjustable from 73 millimeters to 110 millimeters, centre-to-centre 600 millimeters–12 millimeters”, and “Regufoam vibration 220 plus 200 by 200 millimeters plus 100 millimeters mineral wool over entire floor”. Leader lines from this list point to the corresponding horizontal layers in the floor assembly. The floor buildup is shown extending horizontally to both the left and right of the central wall, composed of multiple thin bands representing finishes, boards, beam supports, and insulation. Beneath these layers is a service zone labeled in bold on the left: “INSTALLATION, DUCTS, PIPING and WIRING CAVITY”. Within this cavity, curved looped line symbols depict routed ducts and wiring paths entering from both apartments labeled “to be installed by buyer: 100 millimeters mineral wool with sound absorption of at least alpha-w 0.9 tightly connected to the beams e. g. glass wool 12–15 kilograms per cubic meter e. g. rock wool 33–35 kilograms per cubic meter”. On each side of the cavity, pedestal-like supports are shown beneath the beams, labeled with small technical annotations “44 by 77” for a vertical hatching and “FIX PLUS R-circled BALKENDRAGER B S W 60-04 Verstelbaar van 73 millimeters total 110 millimeters”. Directly below the service cavity, a thick gray concrete slab spans the full width of the drawing and is labeled “structural concrete floor C D 20-system”. Across this slab, bold text reads: “LEGAL BOUNDARY BETWEEN APARTMENTS”, clearly marking the ownership separation. The slab is rendered with diagonal hatching to indicate structural concrete. On the right side of the slab, two vertical labels appear: one reads “sound proofing test 1 by contra”, and the other reads “sound proofing test 2 by buyer”, both aligned vertically and pointing into the concrete zone. Below the slab, the partition wall continues downward in alignment with the upper wall, again shown with stud framing and cross-hatched insulation, indicating continuity of the acoustic and fire-rated separation through the lower level. Throughout the drawing, arrows and leader lines connect each explanatory text block to its relevant construction layer. Small filled circular markers appear at wall–floor interfaces and along the wall centerline, indicating mechanical connections or supports.

Floor and partition wall detailing Top-Up. The (drawn in bold lines) dry-mounted Do It Yourself top floor is installed by the individual buyers themselves or their private contractors. The legal border between the two apartments is clearly identifiable at the top side of the shell structure’s concrete floor. Source: Created by authors

Figure 4
A diagram shows a floor and partition wall section with an installation cavity and a legal boundary between apartments.The diagram presents a vertical construction section through a floor and partition wall junction, illustrating a hollow floor system with integrated services and a centrally aligned acoustic partition. At the center of the drawing, a vertically continuous partition wall is shown with framed stud construction and cross-hatched insulation infill on both sides. Near the upper portion of the wall, a circular marker labeled “A S” appears on the centerline. Small filled circular symbols are distributed along the wall, indicating fixing or connection points. On the upper right side, a text block for the vertical hatching support at the corner between the vertical and horizontal segments reads: “partition wall to be installed by contractor: division wall 60 minutes per sound insulation value R a greater than 62 decibels. Drawing shows 215-millimeter Gyproc SoundBloc Wall 191 with 15-millimeter gap, construction and connections as per supplier”. Below this, additional notes state: “to be installed by buyer: Optional skirting board at least 1 millimeter away from the top of the screed or seal the space between skirting board and screed with rubber tape or a sealant seam”. A further note reads: “to be installed by buyer: 8-millimeter Mycofoam or similar; Miolok F K 8-millimeter by 100-millimeter, article number 8720801050 via meeu wissen dot n l”. On the upper left side, a detailed material list titled “Hollow floor to be installed by buyer:” specifies the layered buildup as follows: “20 millimeters floor finish in accordance with requirements of subdivision deed and by-laws”, “10 millimeters gypsum fiber board”, “25 millimeters gypsum fiberboard E 22 with underfloor heating milled out”, “18 millimeters underlayment”, “Wooden beams 44 millimeters wide and 70 millimeters high 600 millimeter centres (beam is higher on first floor)”, “FIX PLUS R-circled Beam Support B S W 60-04 Adjustable from 73 millimeters to 110 millimeters, centre-to-centre 600 millimeters–12 millimeters”, and “Regufoam vibration 220 plus 200 by 200 millimeters plus 100 millimeters mineral wool over entire floor”. Leader lines from this list point to the corresponding horizontal layers in the floor assembly. The floor buildup is shown extending horizontally to both the left and right of the central wall, composed of multiple thin bands representing finishes, boards, beam supports, and insulation. Beneath these layers is a service zone labeled in bold on the left: “INSTALLATION, DUCTS, PIPING and WIRING CAVITY”. Within this cavity, curved looped line symbols depict routed ducts and wiring paths entering from both apartments labeled “to be installed by buyer: 100 millimeters mineral wool with sound absorption of at least alpha-w 0.9 tightly connected to the beams e. g. glass wool 12–15 kilograms per cubic meter e. g. rock wool 33–35 kilograms per cubic meter”. On each side of the cavity, pedestal-like supports are shown beneath the beams, labeled with small technical annotations “44 by 77” for a vertical hatching and “FIX PLUS R-circled BALKENDRAGER B S W 60-04 Verstelbaar van 73 millimeters total 110 millimeters”. Directly below the service cavity, a thick gray concrete slab spans the full width of the drawing and is labeled “structural concrete floor C D 20-system”. Across this slab, bold text reads: “LEGAL BOUNDARY BETWEEN APARTMENTS”, clearly marking the ownership separation. The slab is rendered with diagonal hatching to indicate structural concrete. On the right side of the slab, two vertical labels appear: one reads “sound proofing test 1 by contra”, and the other reads “sound proofing test 2 by buyer”, both aligned vertically and pointing into the concrete zone. Below the slab, the partition wall continues downward in alignment with the upper wall, again shown with stud framing and cross-hatched insulation, indicating continuity of the acoustic and fire-rated separation through the lower level. Throughout the drawing, arrows and leader lines connect each explanatory text block to its relevant construction layer. Small filled circular markers appear at wall–floor interfaces and along the wall centerline, indicating mechanical connections or supports.

Floor and partition wall detailing Top-Up. The (drawn in bold lines) dry-mounted Do It Yourself top floor is installed by the individual buyers themselves or their private contractors. The legal border between the two apartments is clearly identifiable at the top side of the shell structure’s concrete floor. Source: Created by authors

Close modal

In Top-Up, the vertical shafts are also located in the common central core of the building, not in the apartments. Due to the sensitivity to construction errors and the legal uncertainty of the Slimline floors, Lemniskade opted for a more traditional floor construction in Top-Up, based on the CD20 construction system. This system is a prefab concrete system that is assembled with steel joints. The 6.6 × 3.3 m concrete floor elements are reinforced in two directions, eliminating the need for beams.

The 23 cm high concrete slabs rest directly on the columns at their corners. Normally, these columns would be made of concrete, but in Top-Up, they are made of GLULAM (laminated wood). On top of these concrete slabs, the users/owners themselves created a raised floor using a dry construction method, with a total height of 27 cm where the drains and wiring are installed.

The cavity for drainage slopes and wiring is shallower than in Patch22, making it impossible to place toilets within 2.5 meters of the facade, far from the central core’s vertical shaft. However, since demand for this option was minimal in Patch22 layouts, this was not considered a major limitation for Top-Up. The combination of the 23 cm high concrete floor and the raised floor is intended to provide the required soundproofing.

To ensure that each floor would meet the legal requirements, a manual was written on how the floor should be constructed, and two soundproofing tests were planned. The first test was taken after the concrete floor was completed, and the second after the raised floor was added.

After the first test, it was found that the prefab concrete floor performed better than the sound calculations had predicted. The concrete floor already met the legal requirements, thus forming a legally clear separation between the apartments. As a result, the added soundproofing of the raised floor was no longer necessary to meet legal standards, though it did improve comfort.

An important design principle for the raised floor was the desire to assemble and disassemble it using low-tech equipment: a drill, jigsaw and miter saw. This is equipment that any DIY handyman can use, both now and in the future when drains and wiring might need to be adjusted in the floor. In the Netherlands, modifying or renovating a home or apartment is not typically the domain of professional contractors with specialized equipment and procurement departments, but rather the domain of handymen or handy relatives who buy materials at local hardware stores.

In both Patch22 and Top-Up, the non-load-bearing apartment partition walls consist of a standard Gyproc/Metal-Stud double-wall system [5], which is dry-mounted between the wooden beams (Patch22) (Figure 3) or the concrete floor slabs (Top-Up) (Figure 4). The walls do not contain installations, electrical wiring or ventilation ducts, except for a switch for the loggia lighting. An important consideration during construction is sealing the gaps between the walls and the beams or floor slabs. If gaps remain, the structure becomes susceptible to sound transfer between apartments through airborne noise.

Another consideration is the position of the loggia lighting switch in the partition walls. These must never be mounted in the same position on both sides of the wall but should be offset by at least 60 cm to prevent sound transmission through the electrical sockets.

Both Patch22 (Figure 5) and Top-Up (Figure 6) are equipped with water-based radiant heating. In Patch22, the pipes are laid in a wet-applied screed layer. When designing the radiant heating systems, consideration was given to the position of future partition walls. The areas where partition walls could be created were kept free of radiant heating pipes so that the top layer in these zones could easily be removed to place a new partition wall between the supporting wooden beams.

Figure 5
A diagram shows a rectangular floor plan with a central core of stairs and lifts surrounded by open bays.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan showing a symmetrical building layout organized around a central service core. The drawing is rectangular in overall shape, with thick, solid perimeter walls on the left and right edges and lighter structural lines defining interior bays. At the center of the plan is an elongated rectangular core zone shaded in light gray. Within this core, multiple circulation and service elements are arranged side by side. On the left portion of the core are two square shafts marked with diagonal cross lines, indicating vertical service or lift shafts. Adjacent to these is a circular spiral staircase drawn with radiating steps around a central column. To the right of the spiral stair is another square shaft with diagonal cross lines. Continuing rightward within the core, a straight stair is shown with parallel treads and a landing, oriented vertically in the drawing. Next to this stair is an additional square shaft with diagonal cross lines. Small triangular arrow symbols are distributed throughout the gray core zone, pointing in different directions, indicating circulation or movement paths. The central core is bounded by thick black walls at its left and right ends and thinner walls along its top and bottom edges. Door openings are visible at the midpoint of the top and bottom sides of the core, aligned with the spiral stair and central shaft. Surrounding the core are large open rectangular floor areas on both the left and right sides, divided by vertical structural lines into bays. These open areas are shown without internal partitions, suggesting flexible or open-plan spaces. Dashed diagonal hatching appears across the mid-height of these surrounding zones, indicating a structural or separation band running horizontally across the plan. Vertical structural supports, or columns, are represented by narrow rectangular elements with diagonal striping, positioned symmetrically above and below the core and repeated across the plan. These striped elements align in rows, forming a regular structural grid. Along the top and bottom edges of the drawing, long horizontal bands with closely spaced vertical lines indicate façade or balcony zones. Within these bands, repeated zigzag symbols appear at several locations, likely representing expansion joints, acoustic elements, or façade details. Small arrow-like markers are shown along the inner edges of these bands, pointing inward toward the main floor areas. The left and right outer boundaries of the plan are emphasized with solid black walls, while intermediate structural divisions are drawn with lighter line weights. The overall composition is bilaterally symmetrical about the vertical centerline passing through the spiral staircase and central shafts.

Shell structure Patch22. Empty floorplan with potential partition walls in diagonal hatching. The heating and water meters are located in the two shafts in the central core while the electricity meters are located in a shared meter cabinet on ground level. Source: Created by authors

Figure 5
A diagram shows a rectangular floor plan with a central core of stairs and lifts surrounded by open bays.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan showing a symmetrical building layout organized around a central service core. The drawing is rectangular in overall shape, with thick, solid perimeter walls on the left and right edges and lighter structural lines defining interior bays. At the center of the plan is an elongated rectangular core zone shaded in light gray. Within this core, multiple circulation and service elements are arranged side by side. On the left portion of the core are two square shafts marked with diagonal cross lines, indicating vertical service or lift shafts. Adjacent to these is a circular spiral staircase drawn with radiating steps around a central column. To the right of the spiral stair is another square shaft with diagonal cross lines. Continuing rightward within the core, a straight stair is shown with parallel treads and a landing, oriented vertically in the drawing. Next to this stair is an additional square shaft with diagonal cross lines. Small triangular arrow symbols are distributed throughout the gray core zone, pointing in different directions, indicating circulation or movement paths. The central core is bounded by thick black walls at its left and right ends and thinner walls along its top and bottom edges. Door openings are visible at the midpoint of the top and bottom sides of the core, aligned with the spiral stair and central shaft. Surrounding the core are large open rectangular floor areas on both the left and right sides, divided by vertical structural lines into bays. These open areas are shown without internal partitions, suggesting flexible or open-plan spaces. Dashed diagonal hatching appears across the mid-height of these surrounding zones, indicating a structural or separation band running horizontally across the plan. Vertical structural supports, or columns, are represented by narrow rectangular elements with diagonal striping, positioned symmetrically above and below the core and repeated across the plan. These striped elements align in rows, forming a regular structural grid. Along the top and bottom edges of the drawing, long horizontal bands with closely spaced vertical lines indicate façade or balcony zones. Within these bands, repeated zigzag symbols appear at several locations, likely representing expansion joints, acoustic elements, or façade details. Small arrow-like markers are shown along the inner edges of these bands, pointing inward toward the main floor areas. The left and right outer boundaries of the plan are emphasized with solid black walls, while intermediate structural divisions are drawn with lighter line weights. The overall composition is bilaterally symmetrical about the vertical centerline passing through the spiral staircase and central shafts.

Shell structure Patch22. Empty floorplan with potential partition walls in diagonal hatching. The heating and water meters are located in the two shafts in the central core while the electricity meters are located in a shared meter cabinet on ground level. Source: Created by authors

Close modal
Figure 6
A diagram shows a square floor plan with a central stair and lift core surrounded by open structural bays.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan organized symmetrically around a central service core. The overall building footprint is nearly square, bounded by a dashed outer perimeter line and continuous structural walls. Solid dark square markers appear regularly along the perimeter, indicating column or structural support locations. At the center of the plan is a rectangular service core divided into two connected zones. On the left side of the core, a compact circulation area contains a spiral staircase shown with radiating steps around a central column. Adjacent to the spiral stair are two small square service shafts marked with diagonal cross lines. Along the top edge of this left core segment, a row of hinged door symbols indicates multiple door openings into the surrounding floor area. Additional door openings are shown along the bottom edge of the core. On the right side of the core, a rectangular lift shaft is shown with diagonal cross lines. Above the lift, a straight stair is drawn with parallel treads and a landing, accessed through a hinged door. A second hinged door connects this right-side core to the left-side circulation zone. A vertically striped central axis runs from the top to the bottom of the plan, passing through the middle of the core and extending into the open floor areas above and below. This axis is marked by alternating diagonal striping and aligns with square column markers positioned along its length. Surrounding the core are four large open floor zones—two above and two below—each largely unobstructed and defined by the perimeter structure and the central axis. Within each open zone, small solid square markers indicate interior column locations arranged symmetrically. Along the top and bottom edges of the plan are continuous façade or balcony bands represented by tightly spaced vertical lines. These bands slope inward toward the center from both corners, forming shallow V-shaped roof or façade lines above and below the main floor areas. Repeated zigzag symbols appear at several points along these bands, suggesting expansion joints or façade detailing. Small arrow-like markers are distributed along the inner edges of these bands, pointing toward the interior floor plates. The left and right sides of the building show vertical structural frames with diagonal bracing symbols between perimeter columns. The perimeter columns are rendered as solid black squares at regular intervals, connected by lighter wall lines and dashed boundary lines. Across the middle of the plan, a horizontal dashed-and-striped band intersects the vertical central axis, visually dividing the upper and lower open floor plates and aligning with the central core.

Shell structure Top-Up. Empty floorplan with potential partition walls in diagonal hatching. A “warm” meter cabinet for the city heating installation and the ventilation box and a “cold” meter cabinet for electricity, water and data are placed in the shared corridor. Source: Created by authors

Figure 6
A diagram shows a square floor plan with a central stair and lift core surrounded by open structural bays.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan organized symmetrically around a central service core. The overall building footprint is nearly square, bounded by a dashed outer perimeter line and continuous structural walls. Solid dark square markers appear regularly along the perimeter, indicating column or structural support locations. At the center of the plan is a rectangular service core divided into two connected zones. On the left side of the core, a compact circulation area contains a spiral staircase shown with radiating steps around a central column. Adjacent to the spiral stair are two small square service shafts marked with diagonal cross lines. Along the top edge of this left core segment, a row of hinged door symbols indicates multiple door openings into the surrounding floor area. Additional door openings are shown along the bottom edge of the core. On the right side of the core, a rectangular lift shaft is shown with diagonal cross lines. Above the lift, a straight stair is drawn with parallel treads and a landing, accessed through a hinged door. A second hinged door connects this right-side core to the left-side circulation zone. A vertically striped central axis runs from the top to the bottom of the plan, passing through the middle of the core and extending into the open floor areas above and below. This axis is marked by alternating diagonal striping and aligns with square column markers positioned along its length. Surrounding the core are four large open floor zones—two above and two below—each largely unobstructed and defined by the perimeter structure and the central axis. Within each open zone, small solid square markers indicate interior column locations arranged symmetrically. Along the top and bottom edges of the plan are continuous façade or balcony bands represented by tightly spaced vertical lines. These bands slope inward toward the center from both corners, forming shallow V-shaped roof or façade lines above and below the main floor areas. Repeated zigzag symbols appear at several points along these bands, suggesting expansion joints or façade detailing. Small arrow-like markers are distributed along the inner edges of these bands, pointing toward the interior floor plates. The left and right sides of the building show vertical structural frames with diagonal bracing symbols between perimeter columns. The perimeter columns are rendered as solid black squares at regular intervals, connected by lighter wall lines and dashed boundary lines. Across the middle of the plan, a horizontal dashed-and-striped band intersects the vertical central axis, visually dividing the upper and lower open floor plates and aligning with the central core.

Shell structure Top-Up. Empty floorplan with potential partition walls in diagonal hatching. A “warm” meter cabinet for the city heating installation and the ventilation box and a “cold” meter cabinet for electricity, water and data are placed in the shared corridor. Source: Created by authors

Close modal

In Patch22, balanced heat exchanger systems were used to ventilate the apartments, as they positively influenced the building’s energy demand calculation. These systems were placed above the loggia ceilings, where they do not impose any restrictions on the interior layout. On paper, a heat exchanger is an excellent solution, but in practice, it proved more challenging. Since each apartment has a unique layout determined by the residents, the ventilation duct design differs in each apartment.

A double duct system is a direct result of the need to balance the system. This takes up a lot of space and requires significant engineering to prevent duct crossings. Moreover, the different interiors were designed by different interior contractors or sometimes even by the owners/users themselves. In practice, it became difficult to balance the ventilation system for the different spaces, resulting in the heat exchanger not functioning optimally and producing excessive noise. Over time, many residents turn off the heat exchanger and revert to the traditional method of ventilation, opening facade windows, thus sacrificing the apartment’s energy efficiency.

For Top-Up, based on the experiences at Patch22, a more straightforward system was selected. In the installation cabinet associated with the apartment in the common corridor, a CO2-controlled extraction system was installed that maintains a negative pressure in the apartment. Fresh air is drawn in naturally through facade vents.

Although this ventilation method is theoretically less energy-efficient than the system used in Patch22, it proves much more adaptable to the varying interior layouts of the apartments. It also requires far less material, as there is no double duct system and only a few extraction nozzles near the communal core are necessary.

In both Patch22 and Top-Up, the official meter cabinets for electricity, water and heating connections are located outside the apartment, in the communal corridor (Top-Up) or in a shared meter room on the ground floor (Patch22). Empty conduits were laid from these external meter cabinets to the interior of the apartments during construction. When building the interiors, the meters can be connected via these conduits. These meters would be an obstacle to layout freedom if they were placed inside the apartments.

In the Netherlands, energy suppliers are private companies with strict requirements. For electricity meters, strict rules apply to the position; in an apartment building, all meter cabinets must be positioned directly above each other, and a door must be present between the meter cabinet and the living room. However, for both Patch22 and Top-Up, it was unknown where the living room would be located, as the apartments were intended to be fully flexible in layout both when they were first built and in the future. Therefore, both buildings’ apartments have been kept free of obstructive obstacles and are designed without vertical shafts, installations or meter cabinets inside the apartment.

In both Patch22 and Top-Up, the elevators are much larger than those in typical residential projects in the Netherlands. For instance, the elevator in Patch22 can accommodate 21 people, and the one in Top-Up can hold 16 people. Of course, such a large number of people would never actually enter the elevator at the same time, so the capacity doesn’t matter. However, the dimensions of the cage and the weight capacity are important. If apartments need to be adapted in the future, it should be possible to transport large (for example, standard plywood 1.22 × 2.44 m) and heavy construction materials in the elevator. Therefore, in open buildings, it is necessary to design the elevator with larger dimensions and a higher load capacity. Additionally, the size of the elevator was an important “unique selling point” during the sale of Patch22. Lemniskade enticed buyers by highlighting that the elevator and adjacent corridor were spacious enough to accommodate a Harley Davidson Sportster motorcycle, allowing owners to park it inside their apartment if they wished.

The sales brochure floor plans for both Patch22 and Top-Up appear deceptively simple, showing nothing more than a completely open space that is freely configurable. However, the design process for creating a “blank floor plan,” a shell apartment, was much more intensive than for designing a “once-only layout.” To create a blank floor plan, 24 different apartment layouts were designed for apartments of various sizes and for different imaginary households, for both Patch22 and Top-Up. Using scenario thinking, layouts were devised for Empty Nesters, DINKYs (Double Income No Kids), families with teenagers, families with young children, families with in-laws, single-parent families, separated households living next to each other with shared children’s rooms, singles and many other variations. These layouts were tested to ensure that they could actually be realized technically within the shell apartments. It was also demonstrated to the authorities for obtaining building permits that the empty shell apartments could be formatted in a way that complies with the Dutch building code. These sample layouts were provided as sample designs in the sales brochures for buyers/users.

As the architect of the building, FRANTZEN et al. did not promote themselves to design layouts for individual buyers; instead, buyers were required to design the apartment layouts with their own personal architect and interior designer. After completion, a survey of the actual layouts in both Patch22 (Figures 7 and 8) and Top-Up (Figures 9 and 10) revealed that none of the sample layouts had been used. Since the buyers had complete freedom and opportunities to design their interiors based on their own needs and preferences with their own architect, the actual floor plans turned out to be much more specific than FRANTZEN et al. had conceived in the sample layouts.

Figure 7
A diagram shows an apartment floor plan with a central stair and lift core and multiple dwelling layouts.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan showing a residential layout organized around a central circulation and service core. The overall footprint is rectangular, bounded by thick, solid perimeter walls on the left and right and continuous facade zones along the top and bottom edges. At the center of the plan is an elongated rectangular core shaded in light gray. Within this core, circulation and vertical services are arranged linearly. From left to right, the core contains a square service shaft marked with diagonal cross lines, a circular spiral staircase with radiating steps around a central column, a second square shaft with diagonal cross lines, a straight stair with parallel treads and a landing, and a third square shaft with diagonal cross lines. Hinged door symbols connect this core to surrounding apartments. Small triangular arrow symbols appear within the gray core, indicating circulation direction. Flanking the core on both sides are multiple apartment units. Each unit contains combinations of living spaces, kitchens, bathrooms, and smaller rooms, delineated by thinner interior walls. Kitchens are identifiable by counters with circular cooktop symbols and rectangular sink blocks. Bathrooms are shown with tiled hatch patterns and include fixtures such as toilets, washbasins, showers, and bathtubs; one bathroom near the upper right includes a bathtub centered along the exterior wall with basins on either side. Several rooms have chamfered or octagonal corners, particularly in the lower central units, creating faceted interior spaces. Door swings are shown throughout, indicating access from the central corridor into each dwelling and between rooms. Built-in storage or cabinetry is indicated by narrow rectangular blocks along walls. Dashed lines inside some rooms suggest structural or planning references. Large living areas occupy the outer corners on both the left and right sides, with open-plan arrangements connecting kitchens and living spaces. Interior columns appear as small solid black squares distributed symmetrically within the floor plate. Along the top and bottom edges of the plan are continuous balcony or façade bands rendered with closely spaced vertical lines. These bands slope slightly toward the center from both ends, forming shallow V-shaped edges. Repeated zigzag symbols appear at intervals along these bands, likely indicating façade joints or acoustic elements. Small arrow-like markers line the inner edges of these bands, pointing toward the interior rooms. The left and right perimeter walls are emphasized with thicker black lines, while intermediate structural divisions use lighter line weights. Vertical structural bays are implied by regularly spaced columns and alignment of walls across the plan.

Typical floor Patch22, level 5. The floor with the most variety of apartment sizes. A small work area is integrated into each apartment. Source: Created by authors

Figure 7
A diagram shows an apartment floor plan with a central stair and lift core and multiple dwelling layouts.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan showing a residential layout organized around a central circulation and service core. The overall footprint is rectangular, bounded by thick, solid perimeter walls on the left and right and continuous facade zones along the top and bottom edges. At the center of the plan is an elongated rectangular core shaded in light gray. Within this core, circulation and vertical services are arranged linearly. From left to right, the core contains a square service shaft marked with diagonal cross lines, a circular spiral staircase with radiating steps around a central column, a second square shaft with diagonal cross lines, a straight stair with parallel treads and a landing, and a third square shaft with diagonal cross lines. Hinged door symbols connect this core to surrounding apartments. Small triangular arrow symbols appear within the gray core, indicating circulation direction. Flanking the core on both sides are multiple apartment units. Each unit contains combinations of living spaces, kitchens, bathrooms, and smaller rooms, delineated by thinner interior walls. Kitchens are identifiable by counters with circular cooktop symbols and rectangular sink blocks. Bathrooms are shown with tiled hatch patterns and include fixtures such as toilets, washbasins, showers, and bathtubs; one bathroom near the upper right includes a bathtub centered along the exterior wall with basins on either side. Several rooms have chamfered or octagonal corners, particularly in the lower central units, creating faceted interior spaces. Door swings are shown throughout, indicating access from the central corridor into each dwelling and between rooms. Built-in storage or cabinetry is indicated by narrow rectangular blocks along walls. Dashed lines inside some rooms suggest structural or planning references. Large living areas occupy the outer corners on both the left and right sides, with open-plan arrangements connecting kitchens and living spaces. Interior columns appear as small solid black squares distributed symmetrically within the floor plate. Along the top and bottom edges of the plan are continuous balcony or façade bands rendered with closely spaced vertical lines. These bands slope slightly toward the center from both ends, forming shallow V-shaped edges. Repeated zigzag symbols appear at intervals along these bands, likely indicating façade joints or acoustic elements. Small arrow-like markers line the inner edges of these bands, pointing toward the interior rooms. The left and right perimeter walls are emphasized with thicker black lines, while intermediate structural divisions use lighter line weights. Vertical structural bays are implied by regularly spaced columns and alignment of walls across the plan.

Typical floor Patch22, level 5. The floor with the most variety of apartment sizes. A small work area is integrated into each apartment. Source: Created by authors

Close modal
Figure 8
A photograph shows a bright open-plan living space with timber detailing, large windows, and a child riding a small bicycle.The photograph depicts a spacious, open-plan apartment interior with a polished gray floor, white ceiling, and extensive timber detailing around structural beams and wall elements. On the left, floor-to-ceiling glazing with sheer curtains brings in daylight and reveals exterior balcony framing. A tall, black freestanding stovepipe rises from floor to ceiling near the windows. In the foreground on the left, two small wooden chairs sit beside a low table stacked with books, with a curved wooden toy track laid across the gray floor. In the mid-ground, children’s toys are scattered across the floor, including small cars, blocks, and a wooden ride-on toy with red wheels. A young child is captured in motion riding a small bicycle across the open living area. Along the right wall runs a low, continuous bookshelf filled with books and small objects, topped with decorative items and a vase of red flowers. Toward the center-left, a wooden dining table with mixed chairs sits beneath pendant lighting, leading visually into a kitchen area at the back with cabinetry and a central island. A large timber-clad volume near the middle of the apartment likely contains service spaces, visually dividing living and kitchen zones while maintaining openness.

Interior Patch22. The wooden post-and-beam structure takes center stage in the interior, while buyers have complete freedom to design and customize the finishes and floor plan to their preferences. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the authors)

Figure 8
A photograph shows a bright open-plan living space with timber detailing, large windows, and a child riding a small bicycle.The photograph depicts a spacious, open-plan apartment interior with a polished gray floor, white ceiling, and extensive timber detailing around structural beams and wall elements. On the left, floor-to-ceiling glazing with sheer curtains brings in daylight and reveals exterior balcony framing. A tall, black freestanding stovepipe rises from floor to ceiling near the windows. In the foreground on the left, two small wooden chairs sit beside a low table stacked with books, with a curved wooden toy track laid across the gray floor. In the mid-ground, children’s toys are scattered across the floor, including small cars, blocks, and a wooden ride-on toy with red wheels. A young child is captured in motion riding a small bicycle across the open living area. Along the right wall runs a low, continuous bookshelf filled with books and small objects, topped with decorative items and a vase of red flowers. Toward the center-left, a wooden dining table with mixed chairs sits beneath pendant lighting, leading visually into a kitchen area at the back with cabinetry and a central island. A large timber-clad volume near the middle of the apartment likely contains service spaces, visually dividing living and kitchen zones while maintaining openness.

Interior Patch22. The wooden post-and-beam structure takes center stage in the interior, while buyers have complete freedom to design and customize the finishes and floor plan to their preferences. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the authors)

Close modal
Figure 9
A diagram shows a residential floor plan with a central stair and lift core and a labeled dedicated workspace.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan of a residential level organized symmetrically around a central circulation core, with one zone designated for work use. The overall footprint is nearly square, bounded by a dashed outer perimeter and thick structural walls, with solid black square markers at regular intervals indicating perimeter columns. At the center of the plan is a rectangular circulation core containing vertical services. On the left side of the core is a circular spiral staircase with radiating steps around a central column, flanked by square service shafts marked with diagonal cross lines. On the right side of the core, a straight stair with parallel treads and a landing is shown above a rectangular lift shaft indicated by diagonal cross lines. Hinged door symbols connect the core to surrounding rooms. Small triangular arrows appear within the core, indicating circulation direction. Extending upward from the central core is a vertically hatched rectangular zone labeled “DEDICATED WORKSPACE”. This space occupies the upper central bay and is aligned with the building’s vertical axis. It connects directly to the circulation core via door openings and is bounded by solid partition walls on both sides. Surrounding the core and workspace are multiple residential units arranged in four quadrants. Each unit contains combinations of living areas, kitchens, bathrooms, and smaller rooms. Kitchens are identifiable by counters with circular cooktop symbols and rectangular sinks. Bathrooms are shown with tiled hatch patterns and include fixtures such as toilets, washbasins, showers, and bathtubs. Several rooms feature chamfered or octagonal corners, especially in the lower central units, creating faceted interior spaces. Built-in cabinetry and storage are shown as narrow rectangular elements along walls. Door swings indicate access from the central core into each apartment and between internal rooms. Small solid black squares distributed throughout the floor plate represent interior columns aligned in a structural grid. Along the top and bottom edges of the plan are continuous façade or balcony bands rendered with closely spaced vertical lines. These bands slope inward toward the center from both corners, forming shallow V-shaped edges. Repeated zigzag symbols appear at intervals along these bands, suggesting façade joints or acoustic elements. Arrow-like markers line the inner edges of these bands, pointing toward the interior floor areas. The left and right perimeter walls are drawn with heavier line weights, while interior partitions use thinner lines. Vertical structural framing with diagonal bracing symbols appears along the outer edges.

Typical floor Top-Up, level 6. On lower levels, there are two apartments with an obligatory workspace in a dedicated area. On level 6 there is only one (in diagonal hatching) making this the floor with the most variety in floorplan layout. Source: Created by authors

Figure 9
A diagram shows a residential floor plan with a central stair and lift core and a labeled dedicated workspace.The diagram presents a horizontal architectural floor plan of a residential level organized symmetrically around a central circulation core, with one zone designated for work use. The overall footprint is nearly square, bounded by a dashed outer perimeter and thick structural walls, with solid black square markers at regular intervals indicating perimeter columns. At the center of the plan is a rectangular circulation core containing vertical services. On the left side of the core is a circular spiral staircase with radiating steps around a central column, flanked by square service shafts marked with diagonal cross lines. On the right side of the core, a straight stair with parallel treads and a landing is shown above a rectangular lift shaft indicated by diagonal cross lines. Hinged door symbols connect the core to surrounding rooms. Small triangular arrows appear within the core, indicating circulation direction. Extending upward from the central core is a vertically hatched rectangular zone labeled “DEDICATED WORKSPACE”. This space occupies the upper central bay and is aligned with the building’s vertical axis. It connects directly to the circulation core via door openings and is bounded by solid partition walls on both sides. Surrounding the core and workspace are multiple residential units arranged in four quadrants. Each unit contains combinations of living areas, kitchens, bathrooms, and smaller rooms. Kitchens are identifiable by counters with circular cooktop symbols and rectangular sinks. Bathrooms are shown with tiled hatch patterns and include fixtures such as toilets, washbasins, showers, and bathtubs. Several rooms feature chamfered or octagonal corners, especially in the lower central units, creating faceted interior spaces. Built-in cabinetry and storage are shown as narrow rectangular elements along walls. Door swings indicate access from the central core into each apartment and between internal rooms. Small solid black squares distributed throughout the floor plate represent interior columns aligned in a structural grid. Along the top and bottom edges of the plan are continuous façade or balcony bands rendered with closely spaced vertical lines. These bands slope inward toward the center from both corners, forming shallow V-shaped edges. Repeated zigzag symbols appear at intervals along these bands, suggesting façade joints or acoustic elements. Arrow-like markers line the inner edges of these bands, pointing toward the interior floor areas. The left and right perimeter walls are drawn with heavier line weights, while interior partitions use thinner lines. Vertical structural framing with diagonal bracing symbols appears along the outer edges.

Typical floor Top-Up, level 6. On lower levels, there are two apartments with an obligatory workspace in a dedicated area. On level 6 there is only one (in diagonal hatching) making this the floor with the most variety in floorplan layout. Source: Created by authors

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Figure 10
A photograph shows a modern open-plan living room with a gray sectional sofa, wall-length bookshelf, and dining area beyond.The photograph shows a bright, modern open-plan apartment interior viewed from the living area toward the dining space and kitchen. In the foreground on the left is a large L-shaped gray fabric sectional sofa with a red cushion and a light-colored throw blanket draped over the chaise. A small wooden side table sits beside the sofa, and a patterned area rug with geometric lines in shades of gray lies on the smooth light-gray floor. Along the entire right wall runs a floor-to-ceiling white built-in bookshelf filled with books of various sizes and colors. Integrated into the shelving at mid-height is a flat-screen television, flush with the surrounding shelves. Decorative objects are interspersed among the books. The ceiling is exposed concrete with visible panel joints. Vertical structural elements and wall panels in light-colored wood divide the interior at intervals. On the left side, large floor-to-ceiling windows framed in wood admit abundant daylight. Outside the windows, a balcony is visible with a hammock suspended between supports, and distant buildings can be seen through the glazing. In the middle distance, a dining table with several chairs is positioned near the windows, with plants and small furnishings nearby. Beyond the dining area, a compact white kitchen with cabinets and appliances lines the right side toward the back of the space.

Interior Top-Up. The concrete ceiling and timber column grid shape the space, blending a warm atmosphere and structure while allowing for a flexible layout. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

Figure 10
A photograph shows a modern open-plan living room with a gray sectional sofa, wall-length bookshelf, and dining area beyond.The photograph shows a bright, modern open-plan apartment interior viewed from the living area toward the dining space and kitchen. In the foreground on the left is a large L-shaped gray fabric sectional sofa with a red cushion and a light-colored throw blanket draped over the chaise. A small wooden side table sits beside the sofa, and a patterned area rug with geometric lines in shades of gray lies on the smooth light-gray floor. Along the entire right wall runs a floor-to-ceiling white built-in bookshelf filled with books of various sizes and colors. Integrated into the shelving at mid-height is a flat-screen television, flush with the surrounding shelves. Decorative objects are interspersed among the books. The ceiling is exposed concrete with visible panel joints. Vertical structural elements and wall panels in light-colored wood divide the interior at intervals. On the left side, large floor-to-ceiling windows framed in wood admit abundant daylight. Outside the windows, a balcony is visible with a hammock suspended between supports, and distant buildings can be seen through the glazing. In the middle distance, a dining table with several chairs is positioned near the windows, with plants and small furnishings nearby. Beyond the dining area, a compact white kitchen with cabinets and appliances lines the right side toward the back of the space.

Interior Top-Up. The concrete ceiling and timber column grid shape the space, blending a warm atmosphere and structure while allowing for a flexible layout. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

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The subdivision drawing is probably the least inspiring drawing of a building but perhaps also the most important. This drawing establishes the property rights within a building, as specified in the division deed. It is also the document that determines the functional use and layout possibilities throughout the entire lifespan of the building.

When a buyer takes out a mortgage to finance the purchase, the subdivision drawing is the document that secures the collateral for the lending bank. Because banks are risk-averse institutions, bank employees are always cautious about allowing changes later on in how the collateral is defined. Therefore, it is important to already incorporate potential future changes in the initial division deed and the associated subdivision drawing.

At Patch22 (Figure 11), each floor is divided into 8 condominium rights, ranging from 40 to approximately 80 m2. By combining condominium rights, potential buyers could determine the size of their apartment. For example, several buyers created a 200 m2 apartment by combining three smaller condominium rights. Each condominium right was provided with the option to create an access door. Some buyers even installed multiple entrances, such as a door to the residential area and a door to a separate home-office area. This setup allows owners to potentially split off parts of their apartments in the future and sell them to their neighbors, making it possible for apartments to expand or shrink or to create a new apartment for a newcomer within the building.

Figure 11
A diagram shows a simplified floor layout with labeled units around a central core and corridor.The diagram presents a simplified horizontal floor layout divided into labeled apartment or workspace zones arranged around a central circulation spine. The overall footprint is rectangular with a slightly sloped top and bottom edge. At the center of the plan is a long horizontal band labeled “corridor”. Within this corridor, a smaller central rectangle is labeled “core”, shown with diagonal cross lines extending to its corners, indicating the primary service or circulation core. Above the corridor, four adjacent rectangular zones are shown from left to right. The first is labeled “W W 18 B” and is filled with diagonal gray hatching. Next to it is “W W 18 C”, also shaded with diagonal gray hatching. To the right of that is an unshaded block labeled “W W 20 C”, followed by another unshaded block labeled “W W 20 B”. Below the corridor, four rectangular zones mirror this arrangement. From left to right, the first lower block is labeled “W W18 A” and is filled with diagonal gray hatching. Next to it is “W W19 A”, unshaded. To its right is “W W 19 B”, unshaded. The far-right lower block is labeled “W W 20 A”, also unshaded. The shaded areas—W W 18 A, W W 18 B, and W W 18 C—are grouped on the left side and upper middle of the plan, distinguished by diagonal striping, while W W 19 A, W W 19 B, W W 20 A, W W 20 B, and W W 20 C appear as unshaded rectangles on the right and lower center. A dashed horizontal line runs along the bottom edge inside the perimeter, parallel to the lower boundary, indicating an additional reference line or setback. Thick dark outlines define the perimeter and internal partitions between each labeled zone.

Subdivision drawing Patch22 (section level 7). Every floor is divided into eight condominium rights, allowing for a maximum of eight flexible-size live-work apartments. The condominium rights can be combined into one bigger apartment, e.g. the 200 m2 apartment (in diagonal hatching). Source: Created by authors

Figure 11
A diagram shows a simplified floor layout with labeled units around a central core and corridor.The diagram presents a simplified horizontal floor layout divided into labeled apartment or workspace zones arranged around a central circulation spine. The overall footprint is rectangular with a slightly sloped top and bottom edge. At the center of the plan is a long horizontal band labeled “corridor”. Within this corridor, a smaller central rectangle is labeled “core”, shown with diagonal cross lines extending to its corners, indicating the primary service or circulation core. Above the corridor, four adjacent rectangular zones are shown from left to right. The first is labeled “W W 18 B” and is filled with diagonal gray hatching. Next to it is “W W 18 C”, also shaded with diagonal gray hatching. To the right of that is an unshaded block labeled “W W 20 C”, followed by another unshaded block labeled “W W 20 B”. Below the corridor, four rectangular zones mirror this arrangement. From left to right, the first lower block is labeled “W W18 A” and is filled with diagonal gray hatching. Next to it is “W W19 A”, unshaded. To its right is “W W 19 B”, unshaded. The far-right lower block is labeled “W W 20 A”, also unshaded. The shaded areas—W W 18 A, W W 18 B, and W W 18 C—are grouped on the left side and upper middle of the plan, distinguished by diagonal striping, while W W 19 A, W W 19 B, W W 20 A, W W 20 B, and W W 20 C appear as unshaded rectangles on the right and lower center. A dashed horizontal line runs along the bottom edge inside the perimeter, parallel to the lower boundary, indicating an additional reference line or setback. Thick dark outlines define the perimeter and internal partitions between each labeled zone.

Subdivision drawing Patch22 (section level 7). Every floor is divided into eight condominium rights, allowing for a maximum of eight flexible-size live-work apartments. The condominium rights can be combined into one bigger apartment, e.g. the 200 m2 apartment (in diagonal hatching). Source: Created by authors

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At Top-Up (Figure 12), Lemniskade and FRANTZEN et al. intended to divide the floors into even more condominium rights than at Patch22, including creating condominium rights without an access door. These condominium rights could only be sold in combination with other condominium rights that did have an access door. The advantage would be that the building could be subdivided even more diverse, and relatively small units could change ownership between neighbors.

Figure 12
A diagram shows a labeled floor layout with numbered zones arranged around a central core and elevator.The diagram presents a simplified rectangular floor layout divided into labeled zones arranged around a central service core. Thick dark lines define the outer perimeter and internal partitions. Across the top row, six adjacent vertical bays are shown, each labeled from left to right: “C 3.3”, “C 3.2”, “C 3.1”, “D 3.1”, “D 3.2”, and “D 3.3”. These six upper bays are shaded with diagonal gray hatching. Within this shaded band, three numbers appear: “14” over C 3.3, “13” over C 3.1, and “15” over D 3.2. On the left middle side, a horizontal band labeled “B 1.4” appears, and on the right middle side, a rectangular zone is labeled “A 1.4”. At the center of the diagram is a central service area. On the left is a rectangular service block subdivided into smaller compartments. Along its top edge, four small filled circular symbols are aligned horizontally, each connected to a vertical line labeled at the top as “B 3”, “C 3”, “D 3”, and “A 3”. The rectangle is internally divided, with the right half marked by a large diagonal cross and the lower left portion also marked by diagonal cross lines. Immediately to the right of this block, the label “core” appears beneath a larger rectangular area outlined with thick lines and crossed diagonally. Further right is a smaller square labeled “e l v”, indicating an elevator. This square is outlined with thick lines and contains diagonal corner lines. Along the left edge of the central service area, a narrow vertical strip shows alternating small filled circles and crossed rectangles stacked vertically. Each of the small filled circles is connected to a horizontal guide line labeled on the left as “C 3”, “D 3”, “A 3”, and “B 3”. The bottom row contains six vertical bays labeled from left to right: “B 3.3”, “B 3.2”, “B 3.1”, “A 3.1”, “A 3.2”, and “A 3.3”. Three numbers appear in this lower row: “18” inside B 3.3, “17” inside B 3.1, and “16” inside A 3.2. The lower bays are unshaded. A thin curved line runs across the lower row from left to right, passing through B 3.3, B 3.2, B 3.1, A 3.1, A 3.2, and A 3.3, indicating a sloped or contoured reference line.

Intended Subdivision drawing Top-Up (section level 3). Every floor was intended to be divided into 14 condominium rights, allowing for a maximum of 6 flexible-size live-work apartments. The condominium rights can be combined into one bigger apartment, e.g. the 200 m2 apartment (in diagonal hatching). Source: Created by authors

Figure 12
A diagram shows a labeled floor layout with numbered zones arranged around a central core and elevator.The diagram presents a simplified rectangular floor layout divided into labeled zones arranged around a central service core. Thick dark lines define the outer perimeter and internal partitions. Across the top row, six adjacent vertical bays are shown, each labeled from left to right: “C 3.3”, “C 3.2”, “C 3.1”, “D 3.1”, “D 3.2”, and “D 3.3”. These six upper bays are shaded with diagonal gray hatching. Within this shaded band, three numbers appear: “14” over C 3.3, “13” over C 3.1, and “15” over D 3.2. On the left middle side, a horizontal band labeled “B 1.4” appears, and on the right middle side, a rectangular zone is labeled “A 1.4”. At the center of the diagram is a central service area. On the left is a rectangular service block subdivided into smaller compartments. Along its top edge, four small filled circular symbols are aligned horizontally, each connected to a vertical line labeled at the top as “B 3”, “C 3”, “D 3”, and “A 3”. The rectangle is internally divided, with the right half marked by a large diagonal cross and the lower left portion also marked by diagonal cross lines. Immediately to the right of this block, the label “core” appears beneath a larger rectangular area outlined with thick lines and crossed diagonally. Further right is a smaller square labeled “e l v”, indicating an elevator. This square is outlined with thick lines and contains diagonal corner lines. Along the left edge of the central service area, a narrow vertical strip shows alternating small filled circles and crossed rectangles stacked vertically. Each of the small filled circles is connected to a horizontal guide line labeled on the left as “C 3”, “D 3”, “A 3”, and “B 3”. The bottom row contains six vertical bays labeled from left to right: “B 3.3”, “B 3.2”, “B 3.1”, “A 3.1”, “A 3.2”, and “A 3.3”. Three numbers appear in this lower row: “18” inside B 3.3, “17” inside B 3.1, and “16” inside A 3.2. The lower bays are unshaded. A thin curved line runs across the lower row from left to right, passing through B 3.3, B 3.2, B 3.1, A 3.1, A 3.2, and A 3.3, indicating a sloped or contoured reference line.

Intended Subdivision drawing Top-Up (section level 3). Every floor was intended to be divided into 14 condominium rights, allowing for a maximum of 6 flexible-size live-work apartments. The condominium rights can be combined into one bigger apartment, e.g. the 200 m2 apartment (in diagonal hatching). Source: Created by authors

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As previously explained, the Municipality of Amsterdam refused to cooperate with this subdivision strategy for Top-Up, even though this kind of subdivision was allowed under Dutch law. The municipality insisted that each apartment consisted of just one condominium right so that they would only need to send a single leasehold invoice per apartment, reducing administrative burdens. Furthermore, the municipality required that each functional use be separately recorded as distinct condominium rights.

While at Patch22, the functions of living and working could still be combined within a single condominium right, this was no longer the case at Top-Up (Figure 13). A live-work apartment at Top-Up thus consists of two separate condominium rights with different leasehold functions—one for the living space and another for the working space. These condominium rights are fixed in position within the building and have different leasehold costs. The consequence is that the work condominium rights create barriers between the residential condominium rights, making it impossible to combine apartments on the same floor logically, as there is now a zone between them that can only be used for work.

Figure 13
A diagram shows a simplified floor layout with numbered zones and a central core and elevator.The diagram presents a simplified rectangular floor layout divided into labeled zones arranged around a central service core. Thick dark lines define the outer perimeter and internal partitions. Across the top row, two large horizontal bays are shown on the left and right, with a narrow central vertical bay between them. The left upper bay contains the number “14”, the narrow central upper bay is shaded with diagonal gray hatching and contains the number “13”, and the right upper bay contains the number “15”. At the center of the diagram is a central service area. On the left is a rectangular service block subdivided into smaller compartments. Along its top edge, four small filled circular symbols are aligned horizontally, each connected to a vertical line extending upward toward the labels “C 3”, “B 3”, “D 3”, and “A 3” at the top. The rectangle is internally divided, with the right half marked by a large diagonal cross and the lower left portion also marked by diagonal cross lines. Immediately to the right of this block, the label “core” appears beneath a larger rectangular area outlined with thick lines and crossed diagonally. Further right is a smaller square labeled “e l v”, indicating an elevator. Along the left edge of the central service area, a narrow vertical strip shows alternating small filled circles and crossed rectangles stacked vertically. Each of the small filled circles is connected to a horizontal guide line labeled on the left as “C 3”, “D 3”, “A 3”, and “B 3”. Below the central service area, a narrow vertical bay is shaded with diagonal gray hatching and contains the number “17”, aligned directly beneath the upper shaded bay labeled “13”. The bottom row contains two large horizontal bays on the left and right, with the shaded vertical bay between them. The left lower bay contains the number “18”, the central shaded bay contains “17”, and the right lower bay contains “16”. The lower bays on the left and right are unshaded. Thin curved lines run across both the upper and lower large bays, indicating sloped or contoured reference lines.

Final Subdivision drawing Top-Up (section level 3). Each floor is divided into four residential condominium rights and two work-condominium rights, allowing for a maximum of four fixed-size live-work apartments. However, work-condominium rights (in diagonal hatching) create a restrictive barrier, preventing the free combination of residential condominium rights. Source: Created by authors

Figure 13
A diagram shows a simplified floor layout with numbered zones and a central core and elevator.The diagram presents a simplified rectangular floor layout divided into labeled zones arranged around a central service core. Thick dark lines define the outer perimeter and internal partitions. Across the top row, two large horizontal bays are shown on the left and right, with a narrow central vertical bay between them. The left upper bay contains the number “14”, the narrow central upper bay is shaded with diagonal gray hatching and contains the number “13”, and the right upper bay contains the number “15”. At the center of the diagram is a central service area. On the left is a rectangular service block subdivided into smaller compartments. Along its top edge, four small filled circular symbols are aligned horizontally, each connected to a vertical line extending upward toward the labels “C 3”, “B 3”, “D 3”, and “A 3” at the top. The rectangle is internally divided, with the right half marked by a large diagonal cross and the lower left portion also marked by diagonal cross lines. Immediately to the right of this block, the label “core” appears beneath a larger rectangular area outlined with thick lines and crossed diagonally. Further right is a smaller square labeled “e l v”, indicating an elevator. Along the left edge of the central service area, a narrow vertical strip shows alternating small filled circles and crossed rectangles stacked vertically. Each of the small filled circles is connected to a horizontal guide line labeled on the left as “C 3”, “D 3”, “A 3”, and “B 3”. Below the central service area, a narrow vertical bay is shaded with diagonal gray hatching and contains the number “17”, aligned directly beneath the upper shaded bay labeled “13”. The bottom row contains two large horizontal bays on the left and right, with the shaded vertical bay between them. The left lower bay contains the number “18”, the central shaded bay contains “17”, and the right lower bay contains “16”. The lower bays on the left and right are unshaded. Thin curved lines run across both the upper and lower large bays, indicating sloped or contoured reference lines.

Final Subdivision drawing Top-Up (section level 3). Each floor is divided into four residential condominium rights and two work-condominium rights, allowing for a maximum of four fixed-size live-work apartments. However, work-condominium rights (in diagonal hatching) create a restrictive barrier, preventing the free combination of residential condominium rights. Source: Created by authors

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A technical consequence of this legal requirement from the Municipality of Amsterdam is that a 60-min fire-resistant partition wall had to be built between the residential and working parts of an apartment, as the Dutch Building Code now considered them to be two separate functional condominium rights rather than a single multifunctional unit.

Due to the mandatory subdivision into condominium rights, double usage was also no longer allowed in the parking calculation. At Patch22, one parking space per live-work apartment was sufficient, while at Top-Up, parking had to be calculated separately for each residential and work condominium right. This resulted in 49 parking spaces for Top-Up, compared to 32 at Patch22, despite similar building sizes.

As a result, at Patch22, there was enough space to create the parking spaces at ground level, but at Top-Up, the higher number of parking spaces necessitated the construction of a two-level parking garage. Due to the different legal frameworks for ownership and usage, Top-Up is harder to adapt in the future than Patch22, even though Top-Up’s improved floor design makes it easier to adapt technically. Additionally, extra partition walls and a parking garage are needed to accommodate the other legal setup. It goes without saying that adding extra physical material and limiting future usage possibilities does not benefit the sustainability of the building.

Because there are no installations, shafts, electrical, heating or water meters within the apartment, both Patch22 and Top-Up offer complete flexibility in the interior layout of the apartments. Lemniskade and FRANTZEN et al. deliberately chose not to show these individual atmospheres on the exterior of the buildings so that the architecture of the buildings expresses the collective nature of the building, rather than being the incidental result of a sum of individual apartments.

Lemniskade and FRANTZEN et al. aimed to give the Patch22 and Top-Up buildings their own unique “architectural address,” a formal characteristic by which the building can be identified in the city, allowing the highly individualized owners/buyers to feel part of the collective that inhabits and maintains the building.

At Patch22, the “architectural address” can be identified in the loosely stacked floors or the diagonals in the facade, which refer to the construction of harbor cranes, characteristic of the port area where Patch22 is located (Figure 14).

Figure 14
A photograph shows a modern building façade with timber cladding and exposed diagonal structural bracing behind glass.The photograph presents a close-up view of a contemporary multi-story building corner under a blue sky with scattered clouds. The façade is divided into two distinct systems. On the left, vertical timber cladding panels form a solid exterior wall punctuated by narrow, vertically oriented rectangular windows arranged in stacked rows across multiple floors. On the right, the building steps outward into glazed bays framed by a prominent white structural lattice. Diagonal and horizontal members create repeated triangular patterns across each level. These structural frames project slightly beyond the timber-clad portion. Behind the glass, interior floors and furnishings are faintly visible, indicating occupied spaces within the projecting volumes. Continuous horizontal floor edges separate each story, while the diagonal bracing aligns vertically from level to level.

Architectural identity Patch22: Loosely stacked floors. Due to the lightness of the wooden structure, wind forces posed the biggest challenge. FRANTZEN et al. shaped the building as if the wind had already shifted its floors. A post-sale survey by Lemniskade revealed that the iconic exterior, combined with neutral casco interiors, was a key factor in attracting buyers, even amid a financial crisis and an undeveloped Amsterdam North. Source: Photo courtesy of Luuk Kramer 2016 (copyright licenced to the author)

Figure 14
A photograph shows a modern building façade with timber cladding and exposed diagonal structural bracing behind glass.The photograph presents a close-up view of a contemporary multi-story building corner under a blue sky with scattered clouds. The façade is divided into two distinct systems. On the left, vertical timber cladding panels form a solid exterior wall punctuated by narrow, vertically oriented rectangular windows arranged in stacked rows across multiple floors. On the right, the building steps outward into glazed bays framed by a prominent white structural lattice. Diagonal and horizontal members create repeated triangular patterns across each level. These structural frames project slightly beyond the timber-clad portion. Behind the glass, interior floors and furnishings are faintly visible, indicating occupied spaces within the projecting volumes. Continuous horizontal floor edges separate each story, while the diagonal bracing aligns vertically from level to level.

Architectural identity Patch22: Loosely stacked floors. Due to the lightness of the wooden structure, wind forces posed the biggest challenge. FRANTZEN et al. shaped the building as if the wind had already shifted its floors. A post-sale survey by Lemniskade revealed that the iconic exterior, combined with neutral casco interiors, was a key factor in attracting buyers, even amid a financial crisis and an undeveloped Amsterdam North. Source: Photo courtesy of Luuk Kramer 2016 (copyright licenced to the author)

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At Top-Up, the floors are also recognizable as separate volumes, but now, through the stacking of tapered facades, they resemble the trunk of a palm tree. The facades are made up of a grid of square windows, nearly identical on every facade. At the building’s corners, the tapered facades meet with mirrored ceiling panels in a distinctive way (Figure 15). This allows residents to address their building as “that building with the mirrors in the corners.”

Figure 15
A photograph shows an upward view of a timber-clad building with stacked projecting balconies against a cloudy sky.The photograph presents a low-angle, upward-looking view of a multi-story residential building finished with horizontal timber cladding. The façade is composed of stacked, offset volumes, each forming deep balcony recesses and projecting floor plates that create a stepped vertical profile. On the right side of the image, continuous horizontal balcony slabs extend outward at each level, with timber soffits visible beneath. On the left, a vertical timber-clad spine runs the full height of the building, separating the projecting balcony zones from glazed interior spaces. Within each recessed balcony, curved timber ceiling panels are visible, forming smooth, wave-like soffits that contrast with the straight horizontal cladding lines on the exterior walls. Glass balustrades line the balcony edges, revealing interior reflections and faint views of rooms behind the glazing. The sky occupies the left portion of the frame, filled with soft, light clouds that provide a neutral backdrop to the warm-toned timber surfaces.

Architectural identity Top-Up: Tapered floors with corner mirrors. At the top of this corner detail, a mirror elegantly resolves the technical challenge of joining two cladding directions. Instead of letting one dominate, the reflection creates a seamless and distinctive architectural feature that identifies the building’s architectural “address.” Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

Figure 15
A photograph shows an upward view of a timber-clad building with stacked projecting balconies against a cloudy sky.The photograph presents a low-angle, upward-looking view of a multi-story residential building finished with horizontal timber cladding. The façade is composed of stacked, offset volumes, each forming deep balcony recesses and projecting floor plates that create a stepped vertical profile. On the right side of the image, continuous horizontal balcony slabs extend outward at each level, with timber soffits visible beneath. On the left, a vertical timber-clad spine runs the full height of the building, separating the projecting balcony zones from glazed interior spaces. Within each recessed balcony, curved timber ceiling panels are visible, forming smooth, wave-like soffits that contrast with the straight horizontal cladding lines on the exterior walls. Glass balustrades line the balcony edges, revealing interior reflections and faint views of rooms behind the glazing. The sky occupies the left portion of the frame, filled with soft, light clouds that provide a neutral backdrop to the warm-toned timber surfaces.

Architectural identity Top-Up: Tapered floors with corner mirrors. At the top of this corner detail, a mirror elegantly resolves the technical challenge of joining two cladding directions. Instead of letting one dominate, the reflection creates a seamless and distinctive architectural feature that identifies the building’s architectural “address.” Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

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In the tension between individual and collective architectural expression, the loggias play a crucial role in both Patch22 (Figure 16) and Top-Up (Figure 17). The loggias, enclosed balconies that are 1.5–3 m deep, are spacious and form a buffer zone along the entire front and rear facades, separating the individual interior from the public exterior of the building. Unlike the apartments, these loggias are fully and expertly finished with wooden cladding.

Figure 16
A photograph shows a freestanding bathtub on a timber balcony enclosed with glass, overlooking a cityscape.The photograph presents a sunlit, enclosed balcony space featuring a freestanding oval bathtub positioned in the foreground on a timber plank floor. The bathtub is paired with a tall, floor-mounted metal faucet placed beside its rim. Full-height glass panels line the outer edge of the balcony, providing unobstructed views across a river and an urban landscape beyond. Angled structural beams cross diagonally outside the glazing, forming a visible bracing pattern that frames the city skyline in the distance. Inside the balcony, the ceiling is finished with narrow timber slats running lengthwise, matching the wooden floorboards and reinforcing the linear character of the space. Along the left side, sliding glass doors connect the balcony to the interior apartment. Further down the balcony, household items and furnishings are visible, including a stroller, small furniture pieces, and potted plants arranged near the wall. Sunlight enters through the glazing, casting long shadows across the floor and highlighting the smooth surface of the bathtub. Beyond the glass enclosure, the background shows a river, parked cars, low-rise buildings, construction cranes, and distant towers under a partly cloudy sky.

Loggia Patch22. A seventh-floor loggia in Patch22, where the owner can relax in a bathtub while taking in the city skyline. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

Figure 16
A photograph shows a freestanding bathtub on a timber balcony enclosed with glass, overlooking a cityscape.The photograph presents a sunlit, enclosed balcony space featuring a freestanding oval bathtub positioned in the foreground on a timber plank floor. The bathtub is paired with a tall, floor-mounted metal faucet placed beside its rim. Full-height glass panels line the outer edge of the balcony, providing unobstructed views across a river and an urban landscape beyond. Angled structural beams cross diagonally outside the glazing, forming a visible bracing pattern that frames the city skyline in the distance. Inside the balcony, the ceiling is finished with narrow timber slats running lengthwise, matching the wooden floorboards and reinforcing the linear character of the space. Along the left side, sliding glass doors connect the balcony to the interior apartment. Further down the balcony, household items and furnishings are visible, including a stroller, small furniture pieces, and potted plants arranged near the wall. Sunlight enters through the glazing, casting long shadows across the floor and highlighting the smooth surface of the bathtub. Beyond the glass enclosure, the background shows a river, parked cars, low-rise buildings, construction cranes, and distant towers under a partly cloudy sky.

Loggia Patch22. A seventh-floor loggia in Patch22, where the owner can relax in a bathtub while taking in the city skyline. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

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Figure 17
A photograph shows a long glazed balcony with timber flooring overlooking a canal-side cityscape.The photograph presents a deep, linear balcony or gallery space finished with timber plank flooring and a matching slatted timber ceiling. The outer edge of the balcony is enclosed with full-height glass panels supported by horizontal metal rails, creating a transparent façade that opens wide views toward a canal and surrounding urban buildings below. A series of evenly spaced rectangular columns clad in light-colored horizontal timber boards runs along the length of the balcony, structuring the space and dividing the glazing into bays. On the right side, a continuous wall of sliding glass doors connects the balcony to the interior apartments. Beyond the glass enclosure, the background reveals a waterside neighborhood with low-rise buildings, rooftops, and moored structures, with construction cranes and larger buildings visible farther away under a lightly clouded sky.

Loggia Top-Up. The loggia of Top-Up in finished state as handed over to the buyers. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

Figure 17
A photograph shows a long glazed balcony with timber flooring overlooking a canal-side cityscape.The photograph presents a deep, linear balcony or gallery space finished with timber plank flooring and a matching slatted timber ceiling. The outer edge of the balcony is enclosed with full-height glass panels supported by horizontal metal rails, creating a transparent façade that opens wide views toward a canal and surrounding urban buildings below. A series of evenly spaced rectangular columns clad in light-colored horizontal timber boards runs along the length of the balcony, structuring the space and dividing the glazing into bays. On the right side, a continuous wall of sliding glass doors connects the balcony to the interior apartments. Beyond the glass enclosure, the background reveals a waterside neighborhood with low-rise buildings, rooftops, and moored structures, with construction cranes and larger buildings visible farther away under a lightly clouded sky.

Loggia Top-Up. The loggia of Top-Up in finished state as handed over to the buyers. Source: Photo courtesy of Isabel Nabuurs 2021 (copyright licenced to the author)

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The loggias are not owned by the individual owners/users but are legally under the jurisdiction of the building’s homeowners' association. Individual owners/users are allowed to use these spaces as they wish, adding “accessories” like lighting fixtures, furniture or even bathtubs, but they may not paint the loggias in different colors or cover them with alternative cladding.

The single-glazed balcony glazing that encloses the loggias not only protects against the strong southwest winds at this site but also, through its reflective glass, serves as an additional filter between the collective city and the individual interior. In this way, the loggias ensure that the individual interiors are scarcely visible in the facades, allowing the buildings to present themselves to the city in a self-aware manner as Patch22 and Top-Up.

On planet Earth, with its finite and limited resources, extending the lifespan of buildings, building components and building materials is of paramount importance. To achieve this technically in an Open Building is relatively easy. By following Stewart Brand’s principle of shearing layers – which advocates for separating elements that change at different rates – and not integrating pipes, drains, ducts, installations and separating walls into the structural components of the building but instead placing them in separate raised floors and partition walls, initially more material is used than in buildings optimized for a single use. However, in the future, it will be easier to preserve and reuse most of the material - the material that remains in the unaltered structural shell – without degradation.

For the architect, designing a building that can be adapted in the future is more intensive than a conventional commission based on precisely defined target groups. The architect’s challenge – potentially aided by AI tools – is to envision and test a wide range of use scenarios without knowing the future inhabitants. By exploring diverse spatial possibilities through sample floor plans, the design first embraces this variety. Only after all infills are removed from the floor plans does the true empty shell emerge; one capable of accommodating any future layout. The architect’s key challenge, therefore, is the fundamental understanding that the user must be regarded as unknown.

However, designing an empty shell does not mean designing an architecturally neutral building. When the building’s exterior is architecturally expressive, individual owners/users – since an Open Building attracts residents interested in creating their own interiors – can also feel part of a larger collective that inhabits a shared building, an architectural address in the city. Loggias can play an important role as a filter between the collective exterior and the individual interior.

Although Patch22 and Top-Up are architecturally very similar and technically easy to adapt to changing uses in the future, the way in which the current use and future adaptability potential are established in legal documents, such as the division deed and the mortgage deeds that govern ownership and authority distribution, is crucial for the actual adaptive capacity of a building (Figure 18). It is therefore important to design building details that are technically easily adaptable while still defining the legal boundaries clearly.

Figure 18
A table shows building flexibility levels across open cities, buildings, and systems with X marks and patterned cells.The figure presents a comparison matrix organized as a table with five rows and ten columns. At the top, columns 1 and 2 are merged for the header “Open Cities greater than”, which is divided below into “Free functional zoning (to allow programmatic transformation)” in column 1 and “Number of apartment-rights greater than number of apartments (to allow reconfiguration of apartment sizes)” in column 2. Columns 3 to 6 are merged for the header “Open Buildings greater than”, which is divided below into “Extra Floor Height” in column 3, “Division walls coincide with load bearing structure” in column 4, “Division walls independent of load bearing structure” in column 5, and “Façade independent from load bearing structure” in column 6. Columns 7 to 10 are merged for the header “Open Systems greater than”, which is divided below into “Façade optimised for or adaptable to changing future use” in column 7, “Installations fully integrated in load bearing and apartment-dividing structure” in column 8, “Installations partly independent of load bearing and apartment-dividing structure” in column 9, and “Installations fully independent of load bearing and apartment-dividing structure” in column 10. On the left, from top to bottom, the row headers are “Non-flexible or one time flexible”, “Slightly flexible”, “Flexible”, “Very flexible”, and “Max-flexible”. In row 1, columns 4 and 8 contain “X” cross symbols, while the other columns are blank. In row 2, columns 4 and 9 contain “X” cross symbols, while the other columns are blank. In row 3, columns 3, 4, 7, and 9 contain “X” cross symbols, while the other columns are blank. In row 4, columns 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, and 10 contain “X” cross symbols, while columns 4, 8, and 9 are blank. Column 2 contains diagonal stripe shading, and column 10 contains dotted shading. A legend beneath the table explains the patterns: diagonal stripes correspond to “Patch 22”, solid dots correspond to “Top-Up”, and a combination of stripes and dots corresponds to “Both Patch 22 and Top-Up”.

Openbuilding.co adaptability evaluation criteria scheme. Flexibility ranges from one-time to repeated adaptability. While all buildings can be modified, designing for adaptability simplifies changes. Openbuilding.co distinguishes these flexibility levels as a design guideline (Frantzen, 2018), considering buildings “Open” if they score “Very flexible” or “Max-flexible.” Patch22 falls short to qualify as “Max-flexible” due to installations in the load-bearing slimline floor compromising its legal barrier function. Top-Up is also not “Max-flexible” since its division deed restricts functional zoning, and the number of condominium rights only matches the number of apartments. Source: Created by authors

Figure 18
A table shows building flexibility levels across open cities, buildings, and systems with X marks and patterned cells.The figure presents a comparison matrix organized as a table with five rows and ten columns. At the top, columns 1 and 2 are merged for the header “Open Cities greater than”, which is divided below into “Free functional zoning (to allow programmatic transformation)” in column 1 and “Number of apartment-rights greater than number of apartments (to allow reconfiguration of apartment sizes)” in column 2. Columns 3 to 6 are merged for the header “Open Buildings greater than”, which is divided below into “Extra Floor Height” in column 3, “Division walls coincide with load bearing structure” in column 4, “Division walls independent of load bearing structure” in column 5, and “Façade independent from load bearing structure” in column 6. Columns 7 to 10 are merged for the header “Open Systems greater than”, which is divided below into “Façade optimised for or adaptable to changing future use” in column 7, “Installations fully integrated in load bearing and apartment-dividing structure” in column 8, “Installations partly independent of load bearing and apartment-dividing structure” in column 9, and “Installations fully independent of load bearing and apartment-dividing structure” in column 10. On the left, from top to bottom, the row headers are “Non-flexible or one time flexible”, “Slightly flexible”, “Flexible”, “Very flexible”, and “Max-flexible”. In row 1, columns 4 and 8 contain “X” cross symbols, while the other columns are blank. In row 2, columns 4 and 9 contain “X” cross symbols, while the other columns are blank. In row 3, columns 3, 4, 7, and 9 contain “X” cross symbols, while the other columns are blank. In row 4, columns 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, 7, and 10 contain “X” cross symbols, while columns 4, 8, and 9 are blank. Column 2 contains diagonal stripe shading, and column 10 contains dotted shading. A legend beneath the table explains the patterns: diagonal stripes correspond to “Patch 22”, solid dots correspond to “Top-Up”, and a combination of stripes and dots corresponds to “Both Patch 22 and Top-Up”.

Openbuilding.co adaptability evaluation criteria scheme. Flexibility ranges from one-time to repeated adaptability. While all buildings can be modified, designing for adaptability simplifies changes. Openbuilding.co distinguishes these flexibility levels as a design guideline (Frantzen, 2018), considering buildings “Open” if they score “Very flexible” or “Max-flexible.” Patch22 falls short to qualify as “Max-flexible” due to installations in the load-bearing slimline floor compromising its legal barrier function. Top-Up is also not “Max-flexible” since its division deed restricts functional zoning, and the number of condominium rights only matches the number of apartments. Source: Created by authors

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With existing contract forms, creative “workarounds” are needed to legally safeguard future functional flexibility. Exploring legal frameworks that enable, rather than restrict, evolving uses is strongly recommended.

Notes by author on AI: ChatGPT.com and deepl.com were used to translate and improve language and readability.

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Published by Emerald Publishing Limited. This article is published under the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) licence. Anyone may reproduce, distribute, translate and create derivative works of this article (for both commercial and non-commercial purposes), subject to full attribution to the original publication and authors. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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