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24 building(s) found:

Revitalisierung Hof D

9951 Ainet, A
Architecture: Stadt : Labor – Architekten (2022-2024) HINWEIS: Der Hof erhielt 2024 einen Anerkennungspreis des Landes Tirol für Neues Bauen. Auf Bauherrenwunsch kann er allerdings nicht besichtig werden!

Die Revitalisierung des Bauernhofs in Osttirol ist ein Beispiel dafür, wie historische Gebäude durch eine behutsame Renovierung und den Einbau moderner Technik zukunftsfähig gemacht werden können, ohne dass der ursprüngliche Charme verloren geht. Außen blieb der Hof nahezu unverändert, während innen eine zweigeschossige Küche und das zu einem großen, stützenfreien Raum umgebaute Dachgeschoß überraschen, die beide vollständig mit Lärchenholz ausgekleidet wurden.

© Arno Ritter
01

Urnenfriedhof

Außervillgraten 22, 9931 Außervillgraten, A
Architecture: Peter Paul Rohracher (2023) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Außervillgraten Open to the public: ja Die Erweiterung erhielt 2024 einen Anerkennungspreis des Landes Tirol für Neues Bauen.

Der auf einem Hang oberhalb von Außervillgraten gelegene Friedhof bei der Pfarrkirche St. Gertraud wurde 2023 um Urnengräber erweitert. Eine 60 m lange, helle Betonmauer mit leicht auskragender Dachplatte wurde hangseitig vor die alte Bruchsteinmauer gesetzt. Im Süden verläuft diese parallel zur Kirche und bildet einen intimen Zugangsbereich zum Friedhof und zur Aufbahrungskapelle. Im nördlichen Teil wurden die aus jeweils einer geschlossenen und zwei offenen Nischen bestehenden Urnengräber locker zueinander versetzt in die Mauer eingelassen.

© Arno Ritter
02

Reconstruction of the Linderhütte Alpine Hut

Spitzkofel - Lienzer Dolomiten, 9908 Amlach, A
Architecture: Plattform Architektur Osttirol (2020-2021) Builder-owner: ÖTK Lienz Accessibility: From the Klammbrückl hikers’ parking lot via the Kerschbaumeralm Refuge (a walk of several hours)

Built in 1883 in exposed high alpine surroundings on Spitzkofel Mountain (Lienz Dolomites), the Linderhütte was largely destroyed by a storm in 2018. On the initiative of several architects from Lienz, the small hut was rebuilt with the help of donations, sponsorship and voluntary work. The shape, dimension and materiality of the historic old structure were not changed, and a self-supporting "inner chamber” made of solid wood elements was placed in the reconstructed solid building.

© Paul Mandler
03

Revitalization of Heinfels Castle

Panzendorf 1, 9920 Heinfels, A
Architecture: Gerhard Mitterberger (2017-2020) Builder-owner: A. Loacker Tourismus GmbH, Museumsverein Burg Heinfels Open to the public: May to October from Tuesday to Sunday (entrance fee) The Heinfels Castle Museum can be discovered on your own or experienced with a guide.

Dating back to the 13th century, the core of Heinfels Castle had fallen into disrepair over the past century. In 2007, the South Tyrolean company Loacker took over the ruin and, in cooperation with the Federal Monuments Office, the State of Tyrol and the newly founded museum association, developed a concept to make them usable for tourism and culture. In a balancing act between old and new, parts of the large castle complex were preserved and restored, while others were reconstructed and reinterpreted.

© Zita Oberwalder
04

Campus Technik Lienz

Linker Iselweg 21, 9900 Lienz, A
Architecture: fasch&fuchs.architekten (2016-2018) Builder-owner: Land Tirol The school campus was awarded the 2018 Tyrolean State Prize for New Building.

On a very cramped site directly on the Isel River, space was to be created for the expansion of four schools. The architects designed a narrow, floating structure directly above the river front, which connects the existing buildings and provides plenty of new space. Amply visible classrooms, structured by the steel framework, are arranged along an open corridor.

© Paul Ott
05

Dolomitenbad Lienz

Rechter Drauweg 1b, 9900 Lienz, A
Architecture: Machné & Glanzl Architekten (2015-2016) Builder-owner: Stadt Lienz Open to the public: during opening hours The renovation and extension received an honorable mention at the 2018 Tyrolean State Prize for New Building Awards

The Dolomitenbad was built in the 1970s by Manfred Machné as a simple, no-frills sports facility in the spirit of that era. Forty years later, his son Hans Peter Machné renovated and expanded the indoor and outdoor pool, resulting in the emergence of a coherent, new whole. The centerpiece of the extension is the sauna area with a curved wooden lamella ceiling, whose shape makes reference to the surrounding Dolomite Mountains.

© Paul Ott
06

Cultural Center Kals

Ködnitz 16, 9981 Kals am Großglockner, A
Architecture: Schneider & Lengauer (2012-2013) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Kals TIP: Events such as concerts or theater performances by the Volksbühne Kals regularly take place here.

In order to give space to the active club and cultural life, the community of Kals decided on constructing a new event center with a hall that seats over 300 people. Schneider and Lengauer realized an elongated building which follows the course of the road, is docked onto the old Ködnitzhof inn, and, with its steep saddle roof and the precisely placed openings, makes reference to the rectory.

© Kurt Hörbst
07

Gradonna Mountain Resort

Burg 24, 9981 Kals am Großglockner, A
Architecture: reitter_architekten, Erich Strolz (2011-2012) Builder-owner: Schultz Gruppe The Gradonna Mountain Resort was one of the projects nominated for the 2014 State Architecture Prize for Tourism and Leisure

A hotel complex, highly controversial on account of its dimensions, was erected in the middle of the forest at an elevation of 1,300 meters. At the center lies the multistory, elongated structure of the hotel with a widely visible tower. Grouped around it and built upon mushroom-like concrete bases are 42 chalets, whose various building types were developed out of the topography. In order to carry out the massive intervention into the high alpine landscape as sparingly as possible, great attention during the planning stage was focused on integrating the resort into the landscape and regional architectural traditions were tied in without making use of flat alpine clichés.

© Günther Egger
08

Funeral Hall and Cemetery Expansion

9961 Hopfgarten in Defereggen, A
Architecture: Schneider & Lengauer (2010-2011) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Hopfgarten Accessibility: Cemetery at the St. John Nepomucene Parish Church. The listed St. Michael’s Chapel, which became a contemporary memorial room for the community’s fallen soldiers, was likewise redesigned.

In the course of the cemetery expansion, a new funeral hall, whose exterior façade made of quarry stone masonry is based on the solid natural stone wall of the cemetery, was erected. The space in the interior, featuring wood paneling and simple benches, ties into the tradition of the farmhouse parlor. A narrow window and a circumferential glass strip placed under the roof bring natural light into the space and establish the relationship to the village, resp. the mountains.

© Kurt Hörbst

Carport and Annexe

9900 Gaimberg, A
Architecture: Rainer Pirker (2010) Open to the public: no PLEASE NOTE: Although in 2010 this private building was awarded a "Distinction of the State of Tyrol for New Buildings” and is part of the architectural tour, the owner does not wish that the property be open to the public!

With small building supplements – a roofed parking space and an additional room on the ground floor – the architect has created an organic connection between the existing residential house from the 1970s and its surrounding natural environment. The Carport, with its polygonal concrete roof and slanted steel-tube supports, defines a new entrance area and integrates the tree population. The polyhedron cellar illuminated from above though a chimney-like shaft opens an existing passage to the garden, thereby creating new connections to the outside.

© Klemens Ortmeyer
09

Hotel Rauter (Conversion)

Rauterplatz 3, 9971 Matrei, A
Architecture: Madritsch Pfurtscheller (2010) Builder-owner: Ilse und Hermann Obwexer

Hotel Rauter, situated in the centre of Matrei, was redeveloped in a number of construction stages under the motto of a concentrated and creative "adjustment”. The wellness area with its indoor swimming pool, the rest room designed as a forest of wooden slats and the garden with its outdoor swimming pool, are dominated by the contrast between the white pools, the furniture and the larch wood.

© Wolfgang Retter
10

Town Office and Community Forum Nußdorf-Debant

Hermann-Gmeiner-Straße 4, 9990 Nußdorf-Debant, A
Architecture: Schneider & Lengauer, HERTL.ARCHITEKTEN (2008-2010) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Nußdorf-Debant Open to the public: partially TIP: Also worth seeing is the Nußdorf‐Debant family village, a housing estate with an integrated SOS Children’s Village by FUCHSUNDPEER und Mario Ramoni (2011).

Community facilities as well as numerous clubs were housed in the old "Community Forum” built in the 1960s (architecture: Hans Buchrainer). Both of these functions were separated when it was expanded by a town office. The "Community Forum” was renovated and correspondingly adapted to the needs of contemporary club life. Erected in a sensitive handling of the local scale, the "Town Office” was placed in front of the existing building so that a "market square” was created towards the street.

© Kurt Hörbst
11

Community Center Assling

Unterassling 28, 9911 Assling, A
Architecture: lor.architektur (2008-2009) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Assling Open to the public: partially

With the new construction of a club house and the concomitant redesign of the village square, a common center was created for the residents of the widely scattered community of Assling, which is made up of 18 hamlets. The existing buildings arranged around the square were bound together by means of an exposed concrete podium with a back wall and roof. The club house, which completes the newly created square in the northeast, was erected adjacent to it.

© Lukas Schaller
12

Steidl furnace expansion and addition

Innervillgraten 76, 9932 Innervillgraten, A
Architecture: Peter Jungmann, Markus Tschapeller (2007-2008) Builder-owner: Alfons Steidl

Way back in a valley in East Tyrol, right next to a torrent, an old, traditional furnace was expanded, with the addition of a "black spatial entity” that with its oblique lighting cubes resembles a negative print of the torrent. Glass panels along the sides mark the high water line of previous floods, large windows bring lots of light into the room, and allow for a good view of the surrounding landscape.

© Wolfgang Retter
13

Hotel Hinteregger (Conversion and Extension)

Hintermarkt 4, 9971 Matrei, A
Architecture: Madritsch Pfurtscheller (2007) Builder-owner: Katharina Hradecky The extension received an award at the 2010 BTV Building-Owner-Awards-Tyrol and Vorarlberg.

Directly in the centre of Matrei is the now historic hotel Hinteregger. The architects used a former cinema hall as a supporting structure for the extension of the northeast wing. The former outside wall was plastered with clay and integrated as a "heating wall”, a wooden construction at loggia level was placed ahead. A wellness zone has been set up on the first floor; its completely glazed front opens the room towards the garden.

© Wolfgang Retter
14

Cultural Center Sillian

Sillian 86a, 9920 Sillian, A
Architecture: Machné Architekten (2007) Builder-owner: TIGEWOSI, Gemeinde Sillian Open to the public: partially

Built on a lot opposite the town hall, the Cultural Center consists of a monolithic, formally independent structure that creates an identification point in the heterogeneously developed community. Sitting above a pervious ground floor is a protruding, closed upper floor with a multifunctional event hall that is shaped in such a way that the large volume does not appear in its full height from the street side.

© Paul Ott
15

Village Hall "de calce”

Ködnitz 15, 9981 Kals am Großglockner, A
Architecture: Schneider & Lengauer (2004-2006) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Kals Open to the public: partially TIP: Also worth seeing is the renovation of the rectory erected by the barons from Görz around 1480, which was executed at the same time by Schneider & Lengauer.

Like the Glocknerhaus planned several years previously by the same architects, the community center enters into a dialog with the topographic conditions and the township of Ködnitz, which is characterized by the parish church and the late Gothic rectory. The four-story, compact structure with flat roofs and horizontal lines establishes a very serene relationship to the existing stock, without compromising it in its singularity.

© Paul Ott
16

Hotel Pension Perfler

Sillian 166, 9920 Sillian, A
Architecture: Peter Jungmann (2004) Builder-owner: Michaela Strieder, Peter Lubeley The tourism building was distinguished at the 2005 BTV Building-Owner-Awards-Tyrol.

The small family owned boarding house in Sillian was converted and extended by the architect Peter Jungmann. The original building’s ground floor was opened as a dining room and fireplace-lobby, a terrace facing towards the south was added. The flat extension building with eight hotel rooms was completed using local building materials and furnished with harmonious materials and detail.

© Wolfgang Retter
17

Community Center "Haus Valgrata”

9931 Außervillgraten, A
Architecture: Machné & Durig, Machné Architekten, Peter Jungmann (2004) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Außervillgraten Open to the public: partially Accessibility: At the northwestern edge of the village, directly on, resp. above the state road

With the "Haus Valgrata” a distinctive building in which various communal institutions were brought together arose at the edge of the village. Adjacent to the existing fire brigade house with a hall for cultural events, the recycling center and construction yard were accommodated in an elongated structure. Its roof forms a large entrance stairway and ends in a new plaza. Located behind it are the foyer and multipurpose hall, which were realized for the most part as superstructure extending above the state road.

© Paul Ott
18

Cultural and Fire Brigade House

Dorf 88, 9961 Hopfgarten in Defereggen, A
Architecture: Machné & Durig (2001-2003) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Hopfgarten The village hall and square were redesigned from 2006 to 2008 (planning: Hans-Peter Machné)

The starting point for the project was the inn that was missing in the village—what followed was a new town policy, which was awarded with the "Building Culture Community Prize” in 2012. The founding of a village renewal commission preceded the construction of the new multipurpose structure. A competition was consequently tendered with Dorferneuerung Tirol (Village Renewal Tyrol). The result is a crystalline structure, conceived in reaction to the exposed slope, with the fire brigade together with a practice forecourt in the lower area and the public functions, including the large event hall, in the overlying element that protrudes eight meters outwards.

© Paul Ott
19

Goldried I – Valley Station

Europastraße 5, 9971 Matrei, A
Architecture: Gerhard Mitterberger (1998-2000) Builder-owner: Thomas Ganzer, Marktgemeinde Matrei, Martin Wibmer, Lukas Resinger Open to the public: during hours of operation Accessibility: directly on the Felbertauernstraße Opposite the valley station is an MPREIS designed by Machné & Durig in 2004.

The Goldried lift valley station situated on the outskirts of Matrei i. O. provides various service facilities, the Tauern Stadium built shortly later by Gerhard Mitterberger provides a centre. The main idea during planning was to creatively integrate the infrastructure for tourism, including the large parking spaces, into the alpine surroundings. The service building for skiing schools and ski-hire and, the cable car stations themselves, were all built of simple industrial materials and designed to fit the requirements of mass tourism.

© Zita Oberwalder
20

Glocknerhaus

Ködnitz 7, 9981 Kals am Großglockner, A
Architecture: Schneider & Lengauer (1999-2000) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Kals, TVB Kals, Nationalparkverwaltung Tirol, Raiffeisenbank Matrei Open to the public: partially (exhibition only in the summer months) TIP: The exhibition space is in the basement and several rooms are devoted to the theme "Under the Spell of the Großglockner Mountain.”

The revitalization of the village center began in the small community of Kals am Großglockner with the Glocknerhaus, which houses the Hohe Tauern National Park administration, the Kals Tourism Association and a branch bank. A plain structure that follows the course of the road was erected; its scale and color scheme refer to the late Gothic rectory and the parish church and thereby creates a harmonious ensemble of old and new.

© Klaus Costadedoi
21

Stüdl Hut

Glor-Berg 18, 9981 Kals am Großglockner, A
Architecture: Albin Glaser (1994-1996) Builder-owner: Deutscher Alpenverein, Sektion Oberland Open to the public: only open during the summer Accessibility: via the Kalser Glocknerstraße (toll road) to the Lucknerhaus, from here approx. 2.5 hours walk TIP: Ideal starting point when climbing the Großglockner

In 1868 Johann Städl and Egid Pegger built the first hut between the Freiwandspitz and the Großglockner; however, severe subsidence made it necessary to rebuild. To compensate for the exposed position at 2800 metres, Albin Glaser designed a long stretched out curved building with a roof that is arched on the wind-side of the building; this reaches down to the ground. The other three facades of the largely self sufficient hut have been covered with wood shingle, the large window openings to the south allow a view right across to the Dolomites.

© Stefan Roßgoderer
22

Community Center and Nursery School

Hermann-Gmeiner-Straße 4, 9900 Nußdorf-Debant, A
Architecture: Gerhard Mitterberger (1992-1995) Builder-owner: Gemeinde Nußdorf-Debant Open to the public: partially Today these buildings form a distinctive town ensemble together with the refurbished "Community Forum” and the "Town Office” (architecture: Schneider & Lengauer, Hertl.Architekten).

A nursery school, a sports center with a changing area, a sauna, a tennis hall with seating, the community forum as well as the fire brigade, building yard and trash collection point—this mix of leisure time offers and community services was realized in the mid-1990s by consolidating and expanding existing buildings in the center of town. The various usages are divided into clearly different structures and, together with the paths and surfaces, form a loose and yet locally defined network.

© Zita Oberwalder