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Mountain Dwellings

Mountain Dwellings
Bjerget
VM Bjerget.JPG
General information
Type residential, parking garage
Architectural style Modern
Location Ørestad, Copenhagen
Completed 2008
Technical details
Structural system Reinforced concrete
Floor count 11
Floor area 33,000 square metres (360,000 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect Bjarke Ingels Group
Main contractor Høpnfer A/S
Awards and prizes 2009 ULI Award for Excellence
2009 MIPIM Award for best residential building
2008 WAF Award for Best Residential Building
2008 Forum AID Award

Mountain Dwellings (Danish: Bjerget) is an award-winning building in the Ørestad district of Copenhagen, Denmark, consisting of apartments above a multi-story car park. The building is designed by Danish architectural practice Bjarke Ingels Group. The apartments scale the diagonally sloping roof of the parking garage, from street level to 11th floor, creating an artificial, south facing 'mountainside'. Each apartment has a "backyard" on the roof of the property in front and below it. The resulting courtyard penthouses are an attempt to balance "the splendours of the suburban backyard with the intensity of an urban lifestyle". Throughout the building, it plays on a mountain metaphor as well as the clash between the urban vibe of the interior parking space as well as the surroundings and the peaceful and organic hillside.

The parking garage contains parking spots for 480 cars. The space has up to 16 m high ceilings, and the underside of each level of apartments is covered in aluminum painted in a distinctive colour scheme of psychedelic hues which, as a tribute to Danish 1960s and '70s furniture designer Verner Panton, are all exact matches of the colours he used in his designs. The colours move, symbolically, from green for the earth over yellow, orange, dark orange, hot pink, purple to bright blue for the sky. Besides being a sloping podium for the residential units to sit on, maximizing sunlight and views, the central garage space also serves as an atrium containing the building's circulation, affording the only access to the apartments. A set of metal stairs climb through the main space over the parking lot, providing access to the hallways across suspended industrial-looking metal-clad concrete connections, while a Swiss-manufactured, ski lift-style inclined elevator moves along the wall of the garage. Each level's hallway is enclosed and encased in painted metal both on the interior and exterior, colored according to floor in the same hues used in the main space.


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