'Europaallee' is a new urban development adjacent to Zurich's main railway station. Situated on an industrial site formerly occupied by the Swiss Federal Railways and the country's postal service, the new masterplan was developed by Kees Christiaanse. In the first phase, a new building for the Zurich University of Teacher Education was added to the existing Sihlpost building, designed by Max Dudler. In the second phase, a new business complex, Europaallee 21, was constructed on the neighboring site. It consists of four office buildings designed by three architecture practices: Max Dudler, Gigon/Guyer Architekten, and David Chipperfield Architects. The four buildings together form a continuous perimeter block with a public central courtyard accessible via generous passageways. The main entrances to the eight-story buildings are placed directly opposite these passageways. Although the buildings can be accessed separately, they are also connected via bridges at all upper floor levels. While they are unified internally in a single complex with continuous floor plates, they retain their own particular interiors and express individuality externally with differences in construction and materials. The practice's building occupies the northeast corner of the site. It is defined by clear geometry and a rational floor plan. The column-free interiors provide a maximum degree of flexibility.
The rationality of the project is reflected in a simple facade with alternating horizontal bands of fenestration and floor plates. The band of floor-to-ceiling windows is intensified by the use of a printed aluminum mesh with different levels of perforation. The glass of the windows is set back in the reveal, running parallel to the building structure before breaking course diagonally to meet with the front plane of the building, creating rhythmic series of inverse bays. The sequence in which these diagonal panes are placed alternates level by level and is reinforced by the aluminum mesh. In its perception, the building oscillates between austerity and playfulness, enclosure and openness. The bay-like facade niches provide good views of the boulevard Europaallee and the internal courtyard.