AMSTERDAM COURTHOUSE
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Collective Places

AMSTERDAM COURTHOUSE

Amsterdam, Netherlands KAAN Architecten

practical info

Studio: KAAN Architecten (Rotterdam, Netherlands)

visual material

general aspects

Amsterdam Courthouse was built to replace the outdated judicial complex in the business district in south Amsterdam. With 50 courtrooms and a surface of almost 50.000 sqm, the building is the biggest courthouse in the Netherlands; its exemplary efficiency materializes in a stately yet open functional structure. In its design, the Courthouse adheres to the principle that the judicial process is a public matter. The 50-meter-high building is a stately yet inviting institution for public discourse. A vast square in front of the building offers an unobstructed view to the lower floor dedicated to the public area through large windows. Passing an elegant canopy on the main square, visitors are welcomed into the ground floor central foyer, equipped with reception desks and a cafeteria. Rising upward, the courtrooms unfold surrounded by spacious foyers where visitors come and go; lawyers consult with clients and reporters. The highest floors are connected through a grand circular staircase, giving way to offices and judges' chambers set around green indoor and outdoor courtyards. All the public areas such as the square, parts of the façade and the entrance hall are clad in natural stone. This choice comes not only for the material's aesthetic qualities but also for the durability and resiliency of the surfaces for easy long-term maintenance. The dark linear façade further emphasizes the dignified look of the building. High steel columns constitute the main loadbearing structure, while progressively smaller openings with fine profiles and hidden window frames create the three-part horizontal division.

about the category

In its design, the Courthouse adheres to the principle that the judicial process is a public matter. The building is horizontally divided into three greater sections to separate its functions and efficient circulation of employees, judges and visitors within its structure. The most open and public areas feature large openings on the lower floors, directly connected to the public square, and get progressively smaller and tailored from collective to individual scale as the nature of work becomes more confidential and private. The relationship with the city is constant, large windows offer multiple views towards the surroundings, and the patios are flooding with greenery and light the courthouse's inner structure. Amsterdam Courthouse was made to stay, serve, and represent the institution it hosts for many years to come. Built through a collaborative process between designers, engineers, contractor and suppliers, the Amsterdam Courthouse is a building where energy efficiency is paired with embedded robustness, where future-proof solutions meet the requests for visitor and employee well-being. Future transformations are anticipated by achieving flexibility in the structure, technical installations, building physics and spatial organization. The building is a stately yet inviting institution for public discourse exuding approachable authority.