Amsterdam Airport Schiphol Terminal | Schiphol, The Netherlands
Architects: KAAN Architecten and Estudio Lamela
Client: SNBV (Schiphol Nederland B.V.
Photographers: Visualization by: - Filippo Bolognese - Beauty & The Bi
Consultants: DGMR
Consultants: Arnout Meijer Studio
Consultants: Planeground
Consultants: ABT
Consultants: INECO
KAAN Architecten and Estudio Lamela, in collaboration with ABT and Ineco, with the support of Arnout Meijer Studio, DGMR and Planeground, have designed the new terminal at Amsterdam Airport Schiphol.
The spatial organization of the new 100,500m2 terminal for approximately 14 million passengers per year, its design and the treatment of its façades,are based on the ability to link up with Schiphol Plaza, the train station and potential future expansions.
This is achieved through architectural clarity, spatial openness, and details such as overhangs and black eaves.
The inspiration behind the design is Schiphol itself and the ethos that has shaped the airport over the past 50 years: functionality, user overview and attention to detail, all well-integrated in an atmosphere of calmness, distinction and practicality.
In what could be said to define the essence of Schiphol’s DNA, space, light and wide open views have been given priority over architectural form.
The design submission defers to the airport’s sobriety and the ‘one terminal’ concept, including transfers free of check-out and check-in and automatic baggage transfers for passengers.
With the design a new standard is set, appropriate for different times and different conditions. The building’s structure will be only minimally seen and appears as the most logical of bones.
Not a single column will block the space.
The façade columns and certain functional areas in the building will bear the load of the roof. Its openness will facilitate any future changes, which speaks of its architectural sustainability.
Both the means and the results are essential elements, for they make the model future-proof: any future developments can easily be absorbed by the infinitely extendable module.
The new terminal’s architectural quality is to be found in its layers of opposites: it is a practically organized and user-friendly place yet also offers a grand, atmospheric and light-filled space, where the everyday and the extraordinary merge.
The traveller experience is central to the design, both in individual and crowd terms.
Overviews, ease of movement, natural daylight and a generous sense of space greet not only departing passengers, but arriving passengers too are given views, comfort and a pleasant spatiality.
Rather than exiting onto a street somewhere under a flyover, arriving passengers will be streamlined after customs through a spacious hall for baggage reclaim, be treated to natural daylight and a view of the Departures Hall, and be welcomed to the urban outdoors at the Jan Dellaertplein facing Schiphol Plaza and the underground train station.
Situated at the centre of the hall is a large plateau, creating a higher ceiling for the baggage hall and giving the check-in and security control area more privacy.
From the raised platform travellers experience the spaciousness of the terminal and the views afforded by the large glass façades, initially of the landside and, higher up, of the airside with its airplanes and extensive views of big skies and the polder landscape.
After automatic baggage processing and the check-in desks, the security checks will take place in an area of warm wooden floors and lush greenery in the large light wells, communicating elements of sustainability inherent in the design.
Apart from creating a natural division of users, which helps to avoid unnecessary crowding, the raised Departures floor also creates another advantage.
The plateau makes a dual-level intersection possible, so that both departing and arriving passengers can enjoy a scenic route through the terminal.
The plateau furthermore gives leeway to baggage handling underneath it, which is an important aspect for Schiphol as a major stop-over airport.
The terminal’s ambiance, something that has a positive effect on people’s experience of the place, is largely determined by the light.
The ceiling and roof of the high, central section is a veritable crown of light, spanning 180 x 150 meters and providing travellers with access to local light, day and night. It is a latticework of squares topped by glass panels and supported by man-sized box girders that gradually change shape in the transition from wall to ceiling, creating openings that appear equally square.
Travellers can look out to the sky as though peering through an ultra-thin membrane.
Tried and tested technical facilities inside the casings of the ceiling provide opportunities to vary the colour, nuance and optical effects of the light.
The glazed frontage and the light-infused ceiling underscore the typically Dutch character of the terminal.
And they embody the low horizons and big cloud-filled skies of those Dutch Golden Age paintings.
Structural modularity and a repetitive rhythm in the façades and roof will serve the overall serenity and unity of the new terminal, while also providing excellent building blocks for any future extension. An integrity and timeless quality define this new link in the chain of Schiphol’s evolutionary development, and yet the design achieved is also distinctive and expressive.