Scope of work

Construction documentation, tender, award of contract,
project supervision architecture and interior design

Realisation

April – October 2014

Principal

Jan Henric Buettner

Construction costs

€ 600,000

1 I 12 Exterior view

2 I 12 Corridor

3 I 12 Seminar room 2

4 I 12 Seminar room 3

5 I 12 Seminar room 3

6 I 12 Lounge

7 I 12 Seminar room 2

8 I 12 Seminar room 1

9 I 12 Corridor

10 I 12 Corridor

11 I 12 Detail threshold

12 I 12 Detail door

Scope of work

Construction documentation, tender, award of contract, project supervision architecture and interior design

Realisation

April – October 2014

Principal

Jan Henric Buettner

Construction costs

€ 600,000

The Peerstall is a former coach house that at times was also used as a stable. In the course of extensive and discerning restoration measures, the historically listed structure was converted into a 500 m² venue that houses three seminar rooms of various sizes and a boardroom for conferences, meetings and events.



Its historical use as a stable served as the basis for the design as a whole, as well as in its details.



The elongated, one-story building made of yellow facing masonry looks out at the Castle’s meadow to the south, with a number of gate openings, while the north side is closed for the most part. In the inside, it is subdivided into several adjacent sections by half-timbered walls. As closely coordinated with the highest authority for historic buildings in the District of Ostholstein, this feature of the historic site was to be taken into account. To make the spatial structure come alive, small passageways were simply cut into the exterior wall frames along the outer wall to connect the various sections. A full-height, transparent room divider made of rolled steel sections with glass panes and recovered wood was added in two areas to provide an acoustical separation. The interior doors are also made of old, rehabilitated spruce wood.
 The specially crafted lighting fixtures highlight the reclaimed timber ceilings and the masonry walls, these design elements thus adding to the distinct atmosphere. The entrance and the adjacent areas were plastered in dark clinker brick, while the passageways are offset by wide wooden thresholds in the floor. The conference rooms were outfitted with a “carpet” made of oak floorboards that is separated from the existing historic walls by a screed concrete frieze.