img(height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=2939831959404383&ev=PageView&noscript=1")

Unique drainage solution

Aco Water Management helps a German town reinforce its cultural identity with its Freestyle aesthetic drainage solution

In association with
Pedestrian zone, Itzehoe, Germany. The town is a mix of old-fashioned charm and one of Germany's leading tech hubs
Pedestrian zone, Itzehoe, Germany. The town is a mix of old-fashioned charm and one of Germany's leading tech hubs

Seamlessly balancing the old with the new is always a tricky job for any architect. However, by using Aco Water Management's new Freestyle grating design service, the German town of Itzehoe was able to use much-needed municipal infrastructure upgrades to freshen up its principal shopping street, and create a bespoke aesthetic drainage solution intrinsically linked to its cultural identity.

The town is tucked away in the north of Germany, on the banks of the River Stör. Despite being one of the oldest towns in the region, Itzehoe is a hotbed of activity for start-up businesses. Boosted by a thriving retail and commercial scene, the town is home to a number of Germany’s leading tech firms.

One of Itzehoe’s highlights is the Feldschmiede – a pedestrianised area which is lined with a number of shops, bars and restaurants. As part of ongoing works to improve the town’s aesthetic, the local authority decided to replace the aging 1970s wastewater and storm water infrastructure underneath the Feldschmiede and combine it with essential upgrades to the area’s broadband cable network. However, rather than a like-for-like replacement they decided to give it a modern – and personal – twist.

  • Laying bricks in traditional herringbone pattern alongside sturgeon drainage to honour the cultural heritage of Itzehoe and its twinned town Cirencester
    Laying bricks in traditional herringbone pattern alongside sturgeon drainage to honour the cultural heritage of Itzehoe and its twinned town Cirencester
  • Seamlessly balancing the old with the new: traditional clinker bricks and the unique sturgeon pattern drainage
    Seamlessly balancing the old with the new: traditional clinker bricks and the unique sturgeon pattern drainage
12

As part of the remedial work Hamburg-based consultants Kontor Freiraumplanung worked with the town’s civil engineering department to create an unmistakeable water management grating that reaffirmed Itzehoe’s proud identity. The design honours the River Stör, which flows through the town, and features three sturgeon motifs ‘swimming’ along the channel’s grating. It was created using Aco Freestyle, a design service which enables end-users or architects to create bespoke grating designs, which Aco then manufactures from coated or uncoated ductile iron to sit on Aco drainage channels.

The bespoke Aco Freestyle channels form part of a new ‘castle street’ style paving along the Feldschmiede, which pays homage to the Gloucester market town of Cirencester, Itzehoe’s twin town. The design comprises of natural clinker bricks laid in a traditional herringbone pattern, interspersed with sleek Aco MultiDrain channels, topped with the town’s Aco Freestyle sturgeon grating. The grating is fitted to the Aco MultiDrain channel using Aco’s Drainlock boltless locking system, which is built into the Freestyle grating.

All work was undertaken with minimal disruption to local residents, and well within the six-month time frame. While the new technical infrastructure has provided a welcome modern boost to Itzehoe’s functionality, the surrounding surface design innovation has allowed the town to honour its cultural identity.

  • The Aco Freestyle grating design references the River Stör, which flows through the town, and features three sturgeon motifs ‘swimming’ along the channel’s grating.
    The Aco Freestyle grating design references the River Stör, which flows through the town, and features three sturgeon motifs ‘swimming’ along the channel’s grating.
  • Freestyle offers freedom to create unique drainage designs that integrate into the architecture and materials of the building envelope
    Freestyle offers freedom to create unique drainage designs that integrate into the architecture and materials of the building envelope
  • Honouring Itzehoe's cultural heritage was paramount to the project
    Honouring Itzehoe's cultural heritage was paramount to the project
123

Commenting on the project, Bodo Schmedtje, head of Itzehoe’s civil engineering department, said: 'To accommodate both the water management systems and wider electrical work we decided to lay the water pipes first, followed by the broadband cables and surface design elements. This enabled us to keep the project on track with minimal disruption to those living and working locally.'

Bettina Bühse, head of Itzehoe’s building control department, added: 'The redesign of the Feldschmiede between La-Couronne-Platz and Kirchenstraße has really enhanced the centre of Itzehoe. We’ve already had brilliant feedback on this new feature of our wonderful town from both residents and visitors alike.'

Freestyle gratings are available in 100mm to 200mm widths and are built to D 400 load classification. The gratings are also compatible with the new Multiline Sealin channel, which has an integrated seal for easy installation, as well as a being a tested solution for groundwater protection.

Aco Freestyle is perfect for projects where customers want to add a truly individual finish, which can be integrated into the overall design of the building envelope, or in the case of Itzehoe, a whole pedestrianised area. As a result, designers can give places like Itzehoe a lasting final touch that is totally unique to a given project.

For more information and technical support visit: www.aco.co.uk/freestyle

 

Contact:

01462 816666

technologies@aco.co.uk


 

Latest

Tuesday 19 November 2024

PiP Webinar: Bespoke House Design

There’s a distinct theme of preservation in this selection of must-reads, looking at historic materials, restoration and retrofitting, and why we should design out hazardous materials

Investigations into indoor air quality, retrofitting historic buildings and heritage materials

Fostering culture and community in a modern, local context is important to Dubai-based Saudi architect Sumaya Dabbagh. We can nurture our identity, she says

We can nurture our identity in a connected world, says the Saudi architect

From facades to lighting, furniture to metalwork, where does Buckley Gray Yeoman go to source the details that put its architecture on point?

Where does BGY go to source the details that make its architecture successful?

Bid for a pair of Sheffield city centre regeneration projects, win a place on a council design services framework, submit a current sustainable project for an international prize - some of the latest architecture contracts and competitions from across the industry

Latest: Two Yorkshire residential-led urban mixed use programmes