Extracts from a text by Matthias Boeckl.
The A1 building by Dietmar Feichtinger shows that the banal task of erecting an office block in a port area is suitable subject for the application of high aesthetic and technological standards.
The most striking characteristic of the building is, naturally, the cladding made of anodised aluminium fins that were specially produced by a German manufacturer. As it primarily serves as solar protection this second skin covers only three sides of the building; the north side, where the conference room is located, is left exposed. The structure is a simple skeletal frame glazed on all sides, the internal concrete columns are skim plastered and painted grey. In principle this arrangement allows open plan offices but here, like everywhere else, the users mostly prefer smaller spaces that are made using lightweight partition walls. The fins made of perforated metal – a prototype for the Donau University in Krems – can be adjusted individually from inside the building. Their colour and structure is reminiscent of the corrugated metal of the containers, that are transloaded here, but they maintain a fine aesthetic of their own that goes far beyond any banal notion of suggesting associations though the use of images. The fact that on the south side the fins are also vertical rather than horizontal (which, in fact, would provide more shade from the midday sun) shows that the skin of metal fins is not merely functional but is also an autonomous aesthetic element On the three lower levels this simple quadratic building is indented on the west and south fronts, which creates a more expansive entrance situation on the one side and a recess, much like an internal courtyard, on the other. The roof terrace, from which you have a view over the entire port area, offers further direct contact with the outdoors. The full height glazing used in the ground floor offices conveys the immediate presence of the transport world outside, as a railway track runs directly past the east facade.
The principal user of the building is the management of the Paris terminal, located on the third floor. A number of transport companies have rented office space on the floors below, while on the ground floor there are counter areas, where the freight papers required by the truck drivers are dealt with, as well as common rooms for the port workers. For these users, but above all also for visitors that have business to do here, the small building conveys a uniquely attractive vibrancy. On the one hand it is completely integrated in its industrial and business surroundings through the various spatial and aesthetic means employed, while on the other it demonstrates a subtle independence, which is what ultimately distinguishes the world of machines from that of human beings.