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Anna Whitlock’s Upper Secondary School

Honouring history and the future
Architecture, Cultural Heritage
Education, Renovation & Transformation
Client:
Location: Stockholm
Awards and nominations: Stockholm building of the year 2019
BTA: 23 000 sqm
Completed: 2018
Photographers: Åke E:son Lindman, Johan Fowelin

In the former government offices on Kungsholmen, designed by Axel Lindegren in the 1920s, stands Anna Whitlock’s Upper Secondary School. With great care, our architects at MAF (now Tengbom) transformed this historically significant building into an inspiring learning environment for future generations, breathing new life into the neighbourhood.

Welcome in. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

Originally constructed in 1926, the building was designed as office space for various government agencies, earning it the nickname Ämbetshuset (“The Government Building”). Over the years, it housed institutions such as the National Board of Public Works and the Swedish National Agency for Education, before becoming home to the County Administrative Board in the 1970s, which remained there until 2015.

“We wanted to preserve memories of the building’s past. Leftover door openings became bookshelves or display cases, and forgotten attic spaces were transformed into art studios”, says Amanda LeCorney, architect at Tengbom. “The students have awakened the building from its slumber. It’s more alive and vibrant than ever before.”

Adapting history for modern education

The key challenge in repurposing the building was creating enough classrooms within a structure originally designed for small offices with load-bearing walls.

For a functional learning environment, classrooms need to be around 60 square metres, with proportions that support good acoustics and clear communication. The solution? Removing some of the load-bearing heart walls, but only in the courtyard wings, which were less historically sensitive. This allowed for the larger rooms required for subjects like chemistry and biology, without compromising the building’s heritage.

“It’s amazing to see how the students have made the building their own. Lounging in the seating we designed or working in a window nook,” says Amanda.

More light, more space, more interaction

Originally, the building had dark corridors, with offices lining the façade. By removing the heart walls, the circulation spaces were moved to the courtyard side, bringing in natural light. Unlike newly built schools, which often prioritise teaching spaces over social areas, this adaptation made clever use of existing spaces, turning leftover areas into valuable communal spots.

Moving through the school now, you feel its generosity. Each floor offers study spaces and social areas, creating a more dynamic learning environment.

Photo: Johan Fowelin

A courtyard with identity

The building lacked a large gathering space for its many students, and the existing courtyard was structurally unsound. The solution? A new courtyard design, inspired by the herringbone parquet flooring in the school’s grand rooms.

A soft rubber surface now covers the central space, featuring a Christmas tree stand at its heart. Just like in a traditional living room.

This flexible courtyard serves as a meeting place, a stage for school assemblies, and a celebration space for graduations.

“The pattern has become a symbol of the school on social media. It’s exciting to see how the students have embraced and expanded on our creativity.”

Photo: Johan Fowelin

Dining in rooms, not halls

With no large open space available, the school restaurant was spread across multiple rooms. What started as a necessity became an advantage, creating a quieter, more pleasant dining experience.

Each room has its own lighting and atmosphere, with some playing music, allowing students to find their preferred spot. Furnished for both small and large groups, the restaurant also functions as a study area outside lunchtime.

Dividing the dining area into smaller rooms should be standard in schools. It significantly improves the acoustic environment.

Photo: Johan Fowelin

A debated but forward-thinking design

Since the school has no sports hall, students use nearby sports facilities. However, the basement features yoga rooms, a gym, and gender-neutral changing rooms. Here, students change and shower in individual booths, with lockers positioned outside. An inclusive design that sparked debate when first introduced.

“This was likely one of the first gender-neutral changing rooms. Today, it’s the norm. At the time, it caused controversy in local media.”

Given that changing rooms are a common site for school bullying, these enclosed shower booths were designed to prevent any form of invasive photography, with doors sealed from floor to ceiling.

“Ironically, when the building was first constructed, strict gender separation was the norm—many original floor plans include rooms labelled ‘female assistant.’”

Anna Whitlock’s. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

Anna Whitlock’s – a celebrated and accessible school

Throughout the renovation, many original features were restored, including the limestone staircase in the main entrance. The building was carefully adapted for accessibility while preserving its historical character.

“We were fortunate to work with bold clients who had a high level of ambition and deep respect for the building’s heritage,” says Amanda.

In 2019, Stockholm named Anna Whitlock’s Upper Secondary School Building of the Year. Today, it plays a vital role in Kungsholmen’s vibrant city life.

Contact person

Oskar Eriksson

+46 702 56 27 39

Midsommarkransen Elementary School

A fire station turned into a school
Midsommarkransens elementary school
Architecture, Cultural Heritage, Interior Design
Education, Renovation & Transformation
Client: Skolfastigheter i Stockholm AB, Sisab
Inauguration: 2023
Location: Midsommarkransen, Stockholm
Gross area: Approximately 14,000 sqm, including 2,000 sqm of renovation
Photographer: Felix Gerlach

The former fire station in Midsommarkransen, built in the early 1940s, has been converted into a school for over 1,000 students. The building maintains a contemporary look, drawing inspiration from the fire station’s original architecture while emphasizing its function as a public building. Welcome to Midsommarkransen Elementary School.

Midsommarkransens skola

Tengbom’s assignment was to integrate the heritage-protected buildings with a modern structure, balancing aesthetics and functionality.

“We solved the equation by placing the five-storey school building behind the preserved wagon hall of the old fire station,” explains Pontus Eriksson, lead architect. “Meanwhile, we transformed the wagon hall into a school canteen with a preschool class above, seamlessly connected to the new main building.”

In this way, the wagon hall retains its historically significant facade as a backdrop at the Bäckvägen-Tellusborgsvägen intersection. The adjacent administration building has also been carefully restored.

High functionality while preserving nature

The new rectangular structure consolidates the school’s spaces across five compact floors. This design preserves much of the natural site, including a centuries-old oak tree and a neighboring wooded area. The area behind the school building has been transformed into a schoolyard that borders the Enbacken Park, complete with natural walking and cycling paths. The connection between these two areas enhances the neighborhood’s appeal for both the public and students, fostering shared use of the schoolyard and park.

Illustration of the school and schoolyard

Thoughtful material choices reflecting historical elements

The fire station’s cultural buildings are classified as green-protected, requiring consultation with a conservation officer. Tengbom’s task was to design a contemporary building that underscores its significant function within the community. But also while respecting the original architecture.
The preserved structures have been meticulously restored using original materials such as slate, brick, and wood. The new school building complements these with modern materials in a harmonious colour palette.

Midsommarkransens skola

A public building designed to stand out

The light sand-coloured concrete facade harmonizes with the surrounding buildings. Parts of the facade feature a bold, undulating relief pattern, lending the structure character and creating dynamic shadows that shift with the angle of the sunlight.

White concrete frames highlight the two entrances, positioned at opposite corners of the building. Their design draws inspiration from the lower sections of the wagon hall. The fifth floor features a lightweight structure clad in light bronze-coloured aluminum. It serves as a creative cluster for all arts-related subjects.

The roof includes a terrace with a pedagogical outdoor space. Aluminum-framed windows with deep relief profiles add an aesthetic touch while providing sun shading.

In January 2023, the school welcomed its first students.

Midsommarkransens skola

Awards and recognitions

Midsommarkransen Elementary School received a ‘Highly Commended’ distinction in the Inside Education category at the World Architecture Festival 2024. The project was also a finalist for Stockholm Building of the Year 2023

Contact person

Pontus Eriksson

Lead Architect
+46 8 412 52 60

Preschools in Varberg

A scalable concept surrounded by nature
Architecture, Interior Design
Education
Client: Varbergs Fastighets AB
Year: 2021
Entreprenuer: MTA
BTA: 2 105 sqm
Photographer: Kalle Sanner & Carl Ander

Tengbom’s environmentally friendly preschool concept is behind three new preschools in Varberg. Wood, playful colours and proximity to the outdoors will give the children a positive experience of nature, even inside. Cherries, lingonberries and butterflies inspired the colour palette, which was chosen based on research.

The preschools Stenen in Tvååker, Klapperstenen in Breared and Bua Preschool are all the result of the preschool concept that Tengbom developed with the idea that it should be possible to apply and adapt to different locations. The design concept is based on the vision “in a forest, on a stone,” and the aim is for users to experience natural elements and colours from the outdoors even while inside the preschools.

“All of these preschools are close to nature and surrounded by green areas. They should blend in with their surroundings naturally,” explains Amanda Karlberg, who was the designer on the project at Tengbom. “Working with a scalable concept for preschools is a smart and sustainable approach. These three schools differ slightly, but incorporate the same basic concept of nature and wood as a material.

“We’re really happy with our beautiful, inspiring new preschool,” says Linda Persson, principal at the Stenen preschool. “The teachers, children and administrative staff all feel good in the space. We like the light, the high ceilings and the colours. The school’s floorplan really allows teachers to teach in a varied and interesting way. We also have great opportunities to split the kids into smaller groups, which is a winning concept of our teaching. Because each home area has several rooms, we also have the opportunity to use and enjoy inspiring, adapted and changing learning environments. The focus and materials in a room can change frequently.”

Visible wooden framework

One of the project goals was to build with wood using an economical and environmentally friendly approach. Two of the preschools are built on a wooden framework and wood appears throughout both the interior and exterior. Wood is also a highly tactile material – the kids can see it, feel it and experience it. The result harmonizes with the calm and playful colour palette that is reminiscent of the forest.

Preschool concept: outdoor naptime

Time spent outdoors is an important part of being in preschool. Each school has a freestanding pergola – an outdoor space made with wooden slats. The pergola provides shelter from the sun in the yard and has the same rural-inspired design as the preschool building, but at a child’s scale. The wooden slats and natural setting call to mind a retreat or a spa. As light falls through the slats, it casts shadows that enhance the atmosphere and bring vibrancy to the yard. The children and the teachers play here, and naptime also takes place outside on the patio.

“Before naptime at the preschool, the children and teachers gather mattresses and blankets from a heated room nearby,” says Amanda. “The children rest or sleep outdoors every day. This is also consistent with the well-being concept that we wanted to convey.”

Nature’s colour palette

The visual design concept inspired by stones and the forest is carried indoors through the colour palette, which offers a nod to nature. Instead of the frequently used palette of whites on preschool walls, the colour scheme in this preschool concept incorporates soft and natural hues. The idea comes from research on colour theory, with inspiration from a blossoming summer meadow. Cherries, lingonberries and butterflies are among the colourful details that provide contrast to the even greenery of the forest or the gray hues of the mountains.

“We don’t have bright colours all over the place, but rather a colourful balance that makes people feel good. It stimulates the brain and keeps spirits high,” explains Amanda. “Kids and adults alike need colour.”

The preschool rooms all put different educational activities in focus. There is a construction room, a sensory room and a studio – each with its own colour scheme.

“Imagine a winter landscape where everything is black, white and gray,” continues Amanda. “In that setting, bold colours would be a warning to the brain. I think our colour concepts might have initially been perceived as too bright and dominant, but the result is far from loud or alarming. It feels soft and warm and works incredibly well with the wood that’s also visible inside.”

Preschool concept: creative and flexible yards

The preschools also have large, varied and creative yards outside, with playground equipment for all ages. The spaces in the yard can be delineated and scaled up or down to give the younger children their own area.

“We’re feeling at home now that the new preschool has been operating for a year and a half,” says Linda Persson. “We all love it and we’re very proud of our preschool. That includes the building and the teaching that we do here!”

Contact person

Kajsa Crona

Practice Director Gothenburg
+46 727 07 79 73

Floraskolan

A place for kids to bloom
Architecture
Education
Client: Skellefteå Municipality
Year: 2020
BTA: 14 600 sqm
Assignment: Program design, Sketches, Systems management, Final collaborative general contracting
Certification: Miljöbyggnad silver
Photographer: Anders Bobert

Floraskolan is a newly built school for preschoolers up to year nine. The goal was to create premises, interiors, equipment and a schoolyard that promote multidisciplinary education for students of varying ages. Our motto when designing the new school in Skellefteå was: “from mine to ours.”

Floraskolan

Built in Skellefteå on a former industrial site, Floraskolan is a new school with a new teaching concept and organization.

“We focused on making the school a place where all students and educators would find fertile ground for achieving their full potential and being able to bloom,” says Mats Jakobsson, lead architect on the assignment.

Floraskolan

Experimental workshops and arenas

To give students and educators the best possible conditions, the new school is divided into various arenas. Like experimental workshops, each one has its own specific content. We have home arenas that belong to a specific group of students and teachers, as well as project arenas with shared premises and equipment. The arenas are linked together by spaces for common and support functions.

Glass and galvanized steel sheeting

From outside, the school rises up with a solitary shape that gives the site renewed purpose and content. The arenas stand out through their height, curved design and the organic material of the façade. Wide brown-glazed glulam panels also add a striking visual quality. The shorter building structures housing the support functions are visually quieter, with a façade in non-organic materials: hot galvanized steel sheeting and plenty of glass.

Plants and inspiration from Monet

Inside, many elements depart from the traditional school in terms of their pedagogic design. This includes the sizes and organization of classrooms, as well as creative room functions and an effort to avoid hallways that are merely hallways.

A plant-inspired palette brings vibrancy and identity to the interior. Monet’s garden and paintings inspired the various arenas, while the entrances and support functions feature colours from Sweden’s nature and materials that refer back to the exterior.

Floraskolan Floraskolan

Contact person

Peter Häggmark

Practice Director North
+46 070 342 58 04

Fornudden School

Building in a park
Architecture, Landscape
Education
Client: Tyresö Municipality
Location: Tyresö, Stockholm
Assignment years: 2015-2021
BTA: 11 000-12 000 sqm
Photographer: Felix Gerlach

Access to the park and flexible spaces on the ground floor that can be used by the general public add a distinctive touch to the new Fornudden School. We combined landscape architecture and pedagogy to design the building and site at the north end of Fornuddsparken in Tyresö, southern Stockholm.

Fornudden
The stairs to the second story double as a gathering place with bleacher-style seating. This feature is part of the scaffolding and sunshade that runs along the building’s southern side.

Tyresö is growing and becoming denser, making a new school essential. Fornudden’s new school and schoolyard opened in fall 2021. Children from preschool to year nine now have access to a full-sized athletics center. The design of the ground floor and athletics center allows for use by the wider community, even outside school hours.

Fornudden

Blending into the park

The school is a backdrop and clear delineation point to Fornuddsparken.

Fornudden School and the separate athletics center are situated in the heart of Fornuddsparken. We aimed to weave the building, schoolyard and park together with a more rigid design near the houses and street that loosens up as it merges with the park. Among other ways, this is evident through the precision of the trees lining the street and the checkered pattern on the ground. Planted areas meander from the park into the schoolyard. The sunken areas between the retaining walls have playground equipment, while the understated spaces encourage spontaneous socializing among older students. To prevent the parking lots from disturbing other activities, they are partially concealed behind short walls and planted areas. A lighting designer developed the lighting concept to create a welcoming atmosphere and an enhanced sense of safety.

“Getting the building to blend in with the park was a major design task,” explains Lina Swanberg, Studio Director Education/Heritage at Tengbom. Part of the solution was the visual scaffolding out toward the park, which breaks up the scale and dissolves the boundary between indoors and outdoors. It also serves as a trellis for climbing plants, which helps the school merge with the park setting and provides some sun protection outside. The school provides a backdrop and a clear stopping point where the park borders Gärdesvägen road.

Good athletics centers are valuable

Fornudden
Large glass panels in the classrooms have kid-friendly windowsills that welcome in the green surroundings – outside moves in, and inside moves out.

Education indoors and out

The pedagogical design facilitates education in several ways. The teaching spaces vary in size, from traditional classrooms to smaller group rooms and study spaces. There is also a mini auditorium with a stage and riser seating where students can perform and present to one another, or gather in large groups for film screenings as an after-school activity.

The team planted a school garden with fruit trees and berry bushes facing the park. The garden and outdoor stage serve as examples of outdoor educational features.

Fornudden
Common functions and spaces, like the cafeteria and the library, are located on the first floor and near the main entrance.

A safe setting for kids and adults

“So much of designing a school is about creating a safe work environment for staff and kids,” explains Lina. “We’ve focused on safety, with the presence of adults near the entrance, where we’ve located the library, cafeteria and administration. Glass panels offer transparency and safety, and make it easy to see which rooms are available and which are occupied.”

The materials are robust and simple. Inside, the false ceiling consists of aluminum slats. The terrazzo concrete exterior with black diabase creates a soft, friendly façade and entryway. This look is echoed in the speckled painted walls indoors. Birch plywood and industrial parquet cover the walls and floors. Pops of yellow, red, and pink add accent colours. The floors are soft for tumbling children. Low windowsills offer views of the park’s treetops from the classroom.

Fornudden
View towards the entrance and the café.

Flexible use

Flexibility has guided the project from the start. The design allows the ground floor to function beyond school hours. The library, mini auditorium, and craft rooms welcome the general public and other organizations when needed.

“In particular, the full-size athletics center needed to be accessible outside school hours,” explains Lina. Afternoons, weekends, and holidays should provide opportunities for use. Many municipalities benefit from good athletics centers, but some remain empty because their design doesn’t support independent use.

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

Practice Director Stockholm
+46 8 412 53 43

Campus Vasastan

One building - many lives
Architecture
Building Preservation & Restoration, Education
Client: Hemsö Fastighets AB
Location: Vasastan, Stockholm
Assignment years: 2019-2022
BTA: 11 000 sqm
Photographer: Felix Gerlach

With the ROT Award-nominated Campus Vasastan on Karlbergsvägen 77 in Stockholm, we transformed a charcuterie factory facing possible demolition into a modern, vibrant campus with three upper-secondary schools in one building.

The building was constructed at some point between 1954 and 1971. It was a charcuterie factory first and later became an office. Today, it is a downtown upper-secondary school for 1,800 students and part of the solution to Stockholm County’s need for 15,000 new upper-secondary places by 2027. In 2019, a courageous Hemsö acquired Kadetten 29, which is now run by education company AcadeMedia.

Campus Vasastan
From a charcuterie factory to an office block – to three upper-secondary schools in one.

“There weren’t any tenants at first. With extensive experience under our belts, and expertise in upper-secondary schools, we worked with Hemsö to develop a detailed plan, a concept and an idea for an attractive school that they could show to potential tenants. Almost like working with branding,” says Karolina Lorentzi, a Tengbom architect with extensive experience in educational settings.

Stockholm’s future: reduced climate impact

Transforming a large building and giving it a new purpose requires significant effort from many players. Care for the environment is evident in the project through reuse, recycling, and high energy targets to contribute to a lower impact on the climate. But of course, the greatest environmental gain comes from the carbon dioxide emissions avoided by not tearing down a building. The on-site greenhouse is built with recycled materials, as is the carcass of the building.

“Reusing an existing structure while creating good settings isn’t just true sustainability. It’s also an efficient use of time – and an incredibly exciting project,” explains Karolina.

Many technical challenges

A reuse project on the scale of Campus Vasastan means facing one technical challenge after the next. The depth of the building presented a challenge for working with daylight, while a low ceiling in several areas required both extensive technical installations and space. Securing solutions for emergency exits and escape routes in a building with many people posed another technical challenge. Additional zones enabled us to make adaptations for accessibility.

Like an archeological dig

Demolition inside an older building that has undergone multiple updates is a bit like an archeological dig. Problems arise as you progress and innovative construction solutions must be found quickly.

Campus Vasastan
Campus Vasastan encompasses around 12,000 square meters on seven stories. Arranging the puzzle of logistics, flows, acoustics, light and structure is a complex process.

“For example, as we cleared off the framework, we found it was in really bad shape. A pillar was broken and construction had to stop. It was hanging, as if by a thread, and we had to call in an engineer. We didn’t have all the blueprints from earlier renovations, and so much of the steel was affected. Novogruppen did an incredible job as general contractors here,” explains Charles Davis, lead architect for the assignment.

Efficient flows and structure in every detail

What makes a school well-functioning? Well, among other things, it comes down to the handling and planning of larger spaces, acoustics, social areas, large-scale flows and logistics, accessibility, air, daylight, fire protection and safety. Campus Vasastan has an area of about 12,000 square meters on seven stories, both above ground and basement and semi-basement levels. It has 53 classrooms and three athletics rooms.

Campus Vasastan
A natural hub that serves many purposes. Presentations, events, studying, or simply a place to hang out.

What was once the garage entrance now serves as the main entry point and leads directly into the heart of campus — the welcoming atrium. From here, visitors get a clear view of all four lower levels, stretching from floor -1 up to floor 2. At street level, the atrium connects to the reception, café, library, student health center and open lounge areas. Meanwhile, the cafeteria, large kitchen, recycling and waste room, athletics center and changing room on floor -1 are also easily accessed from this central space

Campus Vasastan
Construction began in 2021 and the school welcomed its first students in fall 2022.

The upper floors contain light-filled classrooms designed for concentration, along with study spaces, administration offices, a teachers’ lounge, common areas, and flexible subject-specific classrooms. The team designed the open spaces to allow zoning and adaptable furnishings, creating rooms within rooms.

The third-story outdoor space, covering approximately 1,000 square meters, features a greenhouse. Students and staff can use this educational space as an extension of lab work, for gatherings, or simply as a lush green retreat.

How did we do it?

“Campus Vasastan was a success thanks to an open partnership with plenty of momentum from all players involved, with an open-minded approach and a clear common goal,” says Karolina. “Tengbom brought in expertise from an early stage and we were able to be on site throughout the project.”

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

Practice Director Stockholm
+46 8 412 53 43

Vendelsömalm School Building A

From the 1960s, now in new garb
Architecture, Cultural Heritage
Accessibility, Building Preservation & Restoration, Education, Renovation & Transformation
Client:
Location: Haninge Municipality
BTA: 8000 sqm
Assignment years: 2017-2021
Photographer: Felix Gerlach

In an understated concrete and wooden structure that is typical of its era, Vendelsömalm School opened in Haninge in 1966. With an aim to “preserve and reuse as much as possible,” the school has now been updated to meet contemporary needs and requirements. 

The original Vendelsömalm School consisted of a robust building with a few distinctive and sturdy materials, like untreated concrete and pine, brown linoleum and terrazzo. A minium red accent colour added contrast and recurred in the windows and wooden doors. Several renovations and technology installations were then carried out.

Vendelsömalm School
The 110-meter-long main hall and the stairway system link the building together.
Vendelsömalm School
The team made the main entrance and two schoolyard entrances accessible and replaced the entryways.

A return to the original quality

Vendelsömalm School has 600 students from preschool to ninth grade. In 2018, the school underwent an extensive and necessary renovation, replacing the ventilation and electricity. Tengbom was tasked with renovating and upgrading the main building and modernizing the accessibility and functionality of the floor plan.

“We wanted to retain the feel of the original, with cast concrete on three half-levels,” explains Tove. The 110-meter-long main hall, with its beautiful stairway, holds everything together. At the same time, we wanted to restore the former look of natural materials and recreate them in conversation with a contemporary style.

Greater security with a new floorplan

When we adapted the premises for their purpose, we moved the reception and principal’s office closer to the main entrance. The break room was also moved to improve student safety. The special education classroom, student health, library and teachers’ lounge were all placed centrally in the building.

“Vendelsömalm School isn’t a listed building. However, we brought in one of our restoration architects early on to document and analyze the building,” says Tove. “That study was the basis for several decisions.”

We let in more light

The team installed energy-efficient windows with transoms that resemble the originals, along with awnings and natural-coloured facade panels. They also made the main entrance and two schoolyard entrances accessible and replaced the entryways. Inside, they updated all installations and converted the cellar into a fan room. A new elevator now provides access down to the basement floor.

For more light, accessibility and safety, the new doors are glazed. The doors are all orange once again, like the original colour. A total renovation of the surfaces entailed new floors, a new false ceiling, acoustic solutions and fresh paint. There is now also a garbage room and a loading yard.

Vendelsömalm School
The tables and benches have an open design that neither cements roles nor determines who sits where.
Vendelsömalm School
The facades now have energy-efficient windows with transoms reminiscent of the original windows, awnings, and natural-coloured facade panels.

Renewal from historic walls

“The goal was to clean and restore the concrete in the main hall,” says Tove. “We decided to remove the old murals, which students painted with latex paint in the 90s. Unfortunately, it was hard to carry out such an extensive restoration of concrete. Instead, it was painted in concrete-like colours with the preserved rough texture of boards at the base. Old dents and the history on the walls can add a lot of beauty and invigoration.”

The false ceiling in the big main hall features untreated wood, restoring the room’s original concept. The walls in the combined assembly hall and cafeteria now have untreated wood panels, enhancing both aesthetics and acoustics.

Vendelsömalm School
A restful space.

Sound is subdued by the building – not the kids

In the open student areas, the team refreshed the original wooden furniture with modern, inviting seating and tables. They designed the adaptable module system for easy adjustments.

“The design of the tables and benches allows students to move freely without fixed roles or assigned seats,” says Tove. “The space adapts to different needs and situations. A school should be welcoming to all.”

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

Practice Director Stockholm
+46 8 412 53 43

Havoteket Pavilion

Care for the ocean
Havoteket
Architecture, Urban Development
Education, Temporary, Urban planning
Client:
Year: 2022
Coillaborators: Serneke, Helsingborg City
Location: Oceanhamnen, Helsingborg
Photographer: Felix Gerlach

Maybe you got to pet the fish at the petting aquarium? Maybe you read or did a science experiment and learned more about underwater flora and fauna? For the H22 City Expo, we created the Havoteket Pavilion in Helsingborg, a sustainable place to learn for anyone who is curious about the sea.

Helsingborg’s H22 City Expo, held from May 30 to July 3, 2022, focused on urban development and innovative solutions for the smart and sustainable city. Hemsöthe City of Helsingborg, Tengbom, Serneke and the Port of Helsingborg opened the Havoteket Pavilion here.

Havoteket
During the H22 City Expo, around forty school and preschool classes booked lessons with a marine educator. Here, students got to take a closer look at oceanic micro life and create their own food webs.

Havoteket – an urban ocean space for the public

The pavilion served as a prototype for tomorrow’s inclusive educational environment, with outdoor learning and activities for people of all ages. Visitors got to learn about the ocean from a sustainable perspective. Kids of all ages got to meet up, read, conduct science experiments and learn, as well as pet fish at the petting aquarium. The concept was based on a clear perspective of inclusivity – everyone should feel welcome at Havoteket.

“Together, we wanted to create an urban venue to gather and learn, where visitors could be amazed by marine life and see how important it is to take care of it, both every day and as part of urban development,” says Berit Christenson, Regional Manager at Hemsö.

Havoteket
Havoteket was created as a partnership between the City of Helsingborg, Hemsö community properties, Tengbom architects, Serneke and the Port of Helsingborg.

Eco-friendly architecture

The architecture of Havoteket reflected the ocean and wind, with elements of sustainability and circular solutions. The largely reusable pavilion was nine meters tall and built with scaffolding, wooden planks, plywood sheets and scaffold netting. The billowing fabric along the facade is intended to be reminiscent of waves on the ocean. The open exhibition space totaled 185 square meters and visitors came in and out via three entrances.

The concept was based on a clear perspective of inclusivity – everyone should feel welcome at Havoteket

Havoteket
The open exhibition space totaled 185 square meters and visitors came in and out via three entrances.

Designing eco-friendly architecture that is equal, inclusive, and accessible requires a creative and incisive collaboration. Havoteket is a great example of this approach. Hopefully, more initiatives like this will emerge. When professionals work across boundaries and titles, they create new spaces that benefit people, society, and the environment.

After the H22 City Expo, the team dismantled Havoteket. Following a circular approach, they will reuse both the land and building materials.

Havoteket
The design mimics ocean waves with billowing fabric.

Contact person

Josefin Klein

Practice Director Skåne
+46 40 641 31 18

Kalmar City Library

Kids get the best room in the new library
Architecture, Cultural Heritage
Accessibility, Building Preservation & Restoration, Culture, Education, Renovation & Transformation
Client:
Year: 2018-2020
Area: 3 100 sqm
Type: Preliminary study and interior design
Builder and partners: Klövern, Ulestedts snickeri & inredningar
Photography: Felix Gerlach

When Kalmar City Library moved into the city’s new cultural quarter, the focus was on children’s love of reading and joy of discovery. This three-story former post office is now a modern, accessible library.

Kalmar City Library
The city library in the old post office from 1947, designed by architect Lars-Erik Lallerstedt.
Kalmar City Library
To the right of the main entrance, the large window lets light into the children’s studio.

At Tengbom, we are passionate about preserving old buildings – and carefully upgrading them to meet the needs and conditions of today. We had the opportunity to create the interior design for the new city library and to transform the old post office and subsequent market hall into a vibrant space for readers of all ages.

From the balcony you can look out over the family section where the story tent enthrones itself in the middle of the room.

Kalmar City Library won Kalmar Municipality’s architecture and urban design award in 2021. From the jury’s statement:

“With a careful, sustainable renovation that qualitatively adds value, this project contributes to developing a good living environment for all residents of Kalmar and serves as a meeting space. The project visually communicates care for the overall whole and in the exterior and interior details, with a balance between form, function and sustainability in order to achieve excellent architecture.”

It started with a horseshoe

The head architect of Posten, L.E. Lallerstedt, designed the post office building in Kalmar in 1947. In the original space, the counter was built into a horseshoe-shaped depression in the floor. Today, this depression, as well as the floor and shapes, serve as a starting point rather than a challenge.

“We wanted to preserve the details, and at the same time we needed to give the space a new sense of flow,” says Hanna Philipsson, architect at Tengbom. “We had the horseshoe to work with, so we went from there and we also used an octagonal pattern from the original floor and the façade.”

Custom interior decor preserves and renews

The library has three stories, and the atmosphere becomes calmer the higher you go in the building. The beautiful entryway has been preserved in its entirety.

Kalmar City Library
Rooms for older children create space for individual reading but also function as a meeting place for smaller groups.
Kalmar City Library
Place-built forms for smaller children offer play and reading.

“We’ve created a lot of custom furniture,” says Hanna. “Interior architects don’t get to design furniture very often. Here, we’ve really gotten to think about it and head to the drafting table. We’ve worked to preserve older aspects while creating new functions.”

Unlike a classic library that naturally encourages silence, Kalmar City Library now invites play and socializing for all ages. Swings and slides add to the fun, while smaller seating areas offer families and kids a place to read, get cozy, and create their own little worlds. In the center of the room stands a light and transparent fairytale tent, inspired by the copper tent in Stockholm’s Haga Park.

Kalmar City Library
The story tent is the heart of the family section. The form interacts with Lars-Erik Lallerstedt’s design.

Open spaces and rooms within rooms

Kalmar City Library
New openings in walls create space and tie the interior together. The balcony offers a view down towards the fiction department.

Interior design ought to be felt and experienced. Naturally, the library also includes spaces for adults. Secluded areas with good lighting create perfect spots for reading and concentration – little rooms within rooms.

The horseshoe shape plays a role throughout the children’s area of the large hall. The room is lined with bookshelves in rounded shapes, with books on the outside and private seating arrangements on the inside.

The palette features blue and brown. The deep blue upholstery, bookshelves, and soft carpeting blend beautifully with the rich, dark-glazed wooden ceiling. In the center, a light brown checked floor adds warmth and harmony.

In addition to the interior design, Tengbom also carried out the feasibility study for the project. The library opened in 2021.

Kalmar city library is a q-marked building that will become part of the cultural quarter of the future.

Contact person

Joao Pereira

Practice Director Kalmar and Linköping
+46 708 79 99 38

Linnaeus University

Academia in the heart of town
Architecture, Landscape
Education, Parks, Play & Public Spaces
Client: Linnaeus University and Skanska
Location: Kalmar
Assignment years: 2014-2020
Environmental certifications: LEED Gold, Passivhus SE
Awards and Recognitions: Winner of Meeting Place of the Year, Kalmar 2023

The Ölandsbron bridge has long defined Kalmar as a city, but now it has some competition. Linnaeus University is located proudly in the heart of the city as Kalmar’s most comprehensive construction. Encounters are the focus here – between the city, academia, students, teachers, the business community, and Kalmar’s residents and visitors. Boundaries between indoor and outdoor settings have been erased in an architectural style infused with daylight, spaciousness and sustainable materials. 

Linnaeus University is located in the southern cities of Växjö and Kalmar. The university’s facilities in Kalmar were fragmented, spread throughout the town. However, with the unveiling of the new buildings, all the faculties have been gathered in one harmonized spot – Universitetskajen. Tengbom designed the eastern portion of the new university, which contains labs, classrooms, offices, a library, café, restaurant, student union premises and information desks. The western portion was designed by CCO Arkitekter.

Linnaeus University
The location in the heart of the city encourages interactions between the university and the city’s residents and businesses. Proximity to the marina keeps the area lively year-round, linked together by the new Universitetsplatsen. Photo: Felix Gerlach

A multi-functional meeting place 

One of the university’s primary goals was to encourage spontaneous encounters among students, researchers, the city and the business community. The architecture meets this goal with a transparent, open environment that welcomes students and city residents alike. The indoor spaces are intentionally infused with an outdoor sensibility achieved with high ceilings, plenty of daylight through skylights, and airy entrances that erase the transition between indoors and out. Rustic and sustainable materials like wood, brick and concrete can be found both inside and on the exterior, and tie the settings together.

Linnaeus University
Linnaeus University connects seamlessly with the city. People meet here—students and teachers, businesses and academia, residents and visitors. The welcoming entrances remove the boundary between outdoors and indoors. Wood, brick, and concrete shape both the interior and exterior. Photo: Felix Gerlach

Natural materials meet bold colours 

The brick facades are treated, thus lending character to the block both indoors and out. On the courtyard side of the building, the stones, ribbon windows and brick pattern are all horizontal, while the pattern is vertical on the street side. The windows reinforce the height, while the window frames highlight the colours of the interior. The pairing of sturdy materials and bold colours is a consistent theme throughout. The shade of yellow, taken from Linnaeus University’s visual identity, is abundantly present both indoors and out.

Linnaeus University
The treated brick facades lend character to the block, both indoors and out. On the courtyard side, the stones, ribbon windows and brick pattern are all horizontal. The pattern is vertical on the street side, and the windows reinforce the height, while the window frames highlight the colours of the interior. Photo: Linnaeus University

Intuitive wayfinding 

The large main staircase culminates in a magnificent roof light. The stairs and atrium facilitate communication and offer an overview of the entire floor. Photo: Felix Gerlach

The colours provide a beautiful contrast to the natural materials, while helping people orient themselves within the buildings. Simple wayfinding within the university is essential, and openness and transparency between the stories and the indoor and outdoor spaces are central contributing factors. The architectural structure incorporates interior avenues and atria, which create effective wayfinding and encourage encounters among people.

Sustainability is never sacrificed 

The interior avenue features the courtyard building’s acoustic slats as an indoor wooden facade. Sheer balustrades, a false ceiling, rustic brick walls, and a shiny concrete floor enhance the space. These functional materials age beautifully and withstand the demands of a university setting. Photo: Felix Gerlach

Ambitious goals for sustainability and the promotion of biodiversity have characterized the project through everything from double environmental certifications to landscape planning. The university has many complex classroom and research settings. For one thing, marine biology is big in Kalmar. The university is home to everything from saltwater pools and greenhouses to algae collections.

A university that is part of the city 

Linnaeus University stands out by integrating with the city, unlike many other higher education institutions built outside urban centers. In Kalmar, bringing the university and the community together is a priority. The waterside location fosters interaction with Kalmar’s residents and businesses. Its proximity to the marina keeps the area lively year-round, connected by the new Universitetsplatsen. The square serves multiple purposes, from start-of-term gatherings and thesis defenses to public events and celebrations.

Photo: Felix Gerlach

Catta Torhell, Head Librarian at Linnaeus University, says: “It’s been wonderful to help plan Universitetskajen. This university integrates with the city and serves as a meeting place for students and employees. At the same time, it welcomes residents and visitors. Here, we can showcase what’s happening at the university while actively participating in the city’s activities and cultural life. The students have already embraced the library building. We often hear spontaneous comments like, ‘What an awesome building – it’s grand and cozy all at once!’”

The main staircase is central within the library. Getting from one place to another, a place to meet and study – it all happens around the staircase! Photo: Felix Gerlach

Contact person

Joao Pereira

Practice Director Kalmar and Linköping
+46 708 79 99 38