architek[tour] tirol – guide to architecture in tyrol

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4 building(s) found:
01

MPREIS on the Sill

Erzherzog-Eugen-Straße 41, 6020 Innsbruck, A
Architecture: Wolfgang Pöschl, Joseph Bleser (2001) Builder-owner: MPREIS Open to the public: during shop opening hours

A large supermarket with sufficient parking space had to be situated on a relatively cramped lot in the middle of the urban fabric. Wolfgang Pöschl and Josef Bleser reacted to the difficult requirements by letting the slightly slanting sales area float above the parking level recessed halfway into the terrain and to bring the mountains as well as the riverbank landscape closer to the customer by means of subtly placed openings. Integrated in the market is a café, which has taken over an important communicative and social function as a type of neighborhood center.

© B&R
02

Hotel Anton

Kandaharweg 4, 6850 St. Anton am Arlberg, A
Architecture: Wolfgang Pöschl, Dieter Comploj (1999-2000) Builder-owner: Robert Falch

Due to the relocation of the railway lines, the family running the hotel had to close it down and relocate by opening a new hotel on the grounds of the old railway station. The hotel they built is a flexible useful house with rooms, which due to the sliding partitions, can be turned into completely functional apartments. The outside of the hotel is decorated with a wood-shingle-façade and large glazed areas; protruding alcoves in the rooms provide resting areas with a view across the mountains.

© Paul Ott
03

Stiglgryzg'te Indoor Swimming Pool, Hotel Maximilian

Herrenanger 4, 6534 Serfaus, A
Architecture: Reinhardt Honold, Wolfgang Pöschl (1988) Builder-owner: Familie Tschuggmall The hotel was converted and reopened at the end of 2009.

At the time of its completion, the Hotel Maximilian indoor swimming pool was one of the rarest examples of alpine tourism architecture away from the usual clichés. The architects set a radical statement by means of a "controlled collision” with the existing building; a "glass tent” with a sophisticated tensioned roof construction, understood as being an artificial form for an artificial location. Its name, an old dialect term for disorder, was given to the swimming pool by the villagers.

© Christoph Lackner
04

Bogen 13 Jazz Bar

Ing.-Etzel-Straße, 6020 Innsbruck, A
Architecture: Wolfgang Pöschl, Reinhardt Honold (1985) Builder-owner: Hans Zifreind Open to the public: yes TIP: Located in the arches No. 18-20 is the p.m.k. As a platform of over 30 cultural organizations, it is one of the important cultural institutions in Innsbruck.

The railway line of the Austrian Federal Railways runs approximately parallel to the Sill on the middle of a railroad viaduct built in the mid-19th century. Bars and clubs populate the mostly converted viaduct arches which make up the Innsbruck party mile "Bögen” ("Arches”). The - meanwhile changed - jazz bar "Bogen 13”, with which Reinhardt Honold and Wolfgang Pöschl ushered in "Deconstructivism” in Tyrol in 1985, long before this was propagated as a "style”, stood at the beginning of this development. In an apparent chaos of materials and forms, elements such as lattice beams, profiles, steel mesh and corrugated sheet panels that correspond to the location are inserted; everything is raw, visually stilted and playfully staged.

© B&R