Archives

Östermalm Market Hall and Hotel

Updated for the future
Östermalm Market Hall
Architecture, Cultural Heritage
Building Preservation & Restoration, Culture, Heritage Expertise, Hotels & Meetings, Renovation & Transformation, Restaurants, Retail
Client: Stockholms Stad
Location: Östermalm, Stockholm
Assignment years: 2021-2021
BTA: Market Hall 6770 sqm and Hotel 4800 sqm
Photographer: Åke E:son Lindman and Lasse Olsson
Collaborators: Ljusrum, Nyréns, AIX, Stockholms Målerikonservering, BK Beräkningskonsulter

With the renovation of Östermalm Market Hall, Tengbom has preserved a part of the city’s history while creating a new way to experience this historic culinary destination. The market hall has undergone the most comprehensive renovation in 130 years, and together with the new market hall hotel, this cultural legacy is ready to welcome visitors for yet another century to come.

Östermalm Market Hall
The large, curved windows and original entrances were renovated and accentuated with nighttime lighting. Photo: Lasse Olsson

After a little over a century in operation, Östermalm Market Hall was in great need of renovation. Decades of sporadic updates had resulted in a space that was no longer particularly inviting.

Our task: update, accentuate and improve

Restoring the market hall to its original luster involved significant challenges. We looked back in time to put the venue’s history to use, but the building also needed to meet modern requirements, and new additions should enhance the visitor experience.

Östermalm Market Hall
Restaurants along the building facades in combination with longer opening hours and outdoor seating areas contribute to a thriving outdoor setting. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

We had to review the building’s technology and consider the complex logistics that take place in and around the hall. Adaptations for accessibility, replacing essentially all technology, and reinforcing the cultural-historic and antiquarian values of the building topped the agenda. Simply put: we wanted to elevate the user experience without corrupting any part of the building.

Respectful adaptation for the future

We have taken a comprehensive approach with great care for the character and details of the building, from technical functions and structural initiatives to restoring the original decoration. The original star-shaped floor plan has been restored to benefit retail and create clearer walkways. Additional features have been added to create new experiences, such as long balconies with seating for restaurant guests. Greater accessibility requirements contribute to a better experience for everyone, with elevators and additional toilets.

Östermalm Market Hall
The original color scheme and decorative details have been restored. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

New additions have a clear contemporary look that is quieter than the bold and colorful cultural-historic environment. In other cases, the choice was to emphasize and enhance the original appearance of the market hall. Paint conservators have carefully scraped away layer after layer of paint to reveal a picture of the building’s history.

Östermalm Market Hall
The original wood construction of the market hall has been renovated and adapted with low paneling and marble counters with integrated refrigerators and display areas. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

Today, visitors encounter a more vibrant space, but in the same colors as before. Light also streams through the gable windows once more. The windows had been painted over at one point, but have now been replaced with new windows and an innovative jalousie system developed from boating technology to protect goods from direct sunlight.

Improved flows and new experiences

Today, visitors are met with a uniform and harmonious experience, a market hall that is now inclusive, adapted for accessibility and sustainable. Improved flows, smarter entryway solutions and a new waste and recycling system that reduces the number of truck transports to a fifth of what it was are just some of the elements that make Östermalm Market Hall an ultramodern meeting place. Restaurants along the building’s facades combined with longer opening hours contribute to a bustling environment outside, with greater focus on contemporary needs and behaviors, such as socializing and being seen.

The hotel – a new way to experience this historic culinary destination

A new hotel has opened that is connected to the market hall. Through parametric design and innovative architecture, Tengbom has helped create an extraordinary hotel experience. An old industrial candy factory from 1910 and an Art Nouveau residential building from 1888 have been transformed into a chic hotel. It was a tricky task to chisel a hotel out of buildings in different styles and from different eras. The historic character of the buildings had to be respected, and at the same time, we needed to unite the structures and redesign the floor plan for compatibility as a hotel. To achieve functional flows on each floor, a modern addition in handmade brick was added to the existing buildings. Together, the buildings circle a courtyard.

Östermalm Market Hall
Together, the modern addition and the original buildings circle a courtyard and create a new meeting place in the city. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

With the market hall hotel, a new sense of flow and energy have been established on the block.

The addition in handmade brick, perforated with sound absorption underneath to create a comfortable sound environment in the hotel courtyard. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

A glass roof in collaboration with technology and the sky

We designed the courtyard as a year-round meeting place to ensure both function and enjoyment. To achieve this, we covered the space with a specially designed glass roof. The elegant, undulating shape makes the roof feel like an extension of the sky rather than a glass cover. Placing a glass roof over three buildings with eaves at different heights posed a unique challenge. We also aimed to retain the feeling of being outdoors while preserving the neighbors’ view and daylight. To solve this, we used parametric design—an algorithmic approach that streamlines the construction of complex shapes. This method allowed us to maximize the glass surface, minimize structural elements, and create a slender roof with an open feel.

With minimal structural elements, the undulating glass roof elegantly arches across the three different buildings with eaves at dissimilar heights. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

Sound – a crucial component

In a large, glassed-in courtyard, acoustics can pose an obstacle to a pleasant experience and the sense of being outdoors. To reduce echoes and excess noise, we chose to cover the addition with a perforated brick facade. By leaving out every other brick and adding sound absorption underneath, we succeeded in creating effective sound reduction. The abstract brick pattern gives the facade a compelling depth while serving an important function. To further ensure noise reduction and a pleasant sound environment, we chose acoustic plaster as a complement when re-plastering the old residential building.

a chic hotel. The passage between the hotel and the market hall now creates a new city flow through the block. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

The result – a new city flow

The passage features site-cast concrete and terrazzo stairs. This creates a subtle yet contrasting transition between the market hall and the hotel. Photo: Lasse Olsson

We retained and restored an existing passage that leads from the street to the hotel’s courtyard. We also created a new passage to connect the courtyard to the market hall. Together, these changes have introduced a new city flow through the block.

“Now passersby can take a shortcut from Nybrogatan via the hotel and market hall to Humlegårdsgatan – which also benefits commercial activity in both buildings.” The new passage that cuts through the old brick and concrete construction required powerful support frames. We chose to expose these changes in painted black steel and site-cast concrete, while creating an understated, contrasting transition to the colorful, detailed environment of the market hall and hotel.

The new passage now connects the market hall to the hotel. Inside, Leontine Arvidsson’s artwork “Bäst före: torsdagen den 12 mars 2020” (“Best by: Thursday, March 12, 2020”) adds a striking visual element. Photo: Åke E:son Lindman.

Taken together, we’ve created an experience that feels like traveling back in time, while the market hall is relevant for the future once again. Time will tell if we’ve hit the right note, as we did with the temporary market hall. But for now the city, country and world have regained a piece of cultural heritage – and then some.

Footnote: The hotel operator and architect Per Öberg developed the design concept for the hotel.

Awards and Recognitions

In 2021, Östermalm Market Hall won the Swedish Lighting Prize (Interior Category) and Stockholm Building of the Year.

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

Lead Architect
+46 8 412 53 43

Temporary food hall at Östermalmstorg

Brief with a lasting impression
Architecture, Interior Design
Retail, Temporary
Client:
Location: Stockholm
Assignment Years: 2013-2016
Project Type: Temporary food hall
Awards: Architizer A+ Award, Design S Architecture Award, Stockholm Chamber of Commerce Urban Environment Award

Trade in fresh, raw produce has returned to Östermalmstorg. Now in the form of a temporary food hall, commissioned by Tengbom. The temporary food hall has not only brought in more business than ever, it has also attracted a new clientèle to the area, and has revealed new uses of the town square. Good architecture in its best form, we say.

First, a little history

Historically, Östermalmstorg has been a place for trading stands and sales of fresh, raw produce. This was until the city administration banned this for hygienic and administrative reasons. In 1888, the new food hall stood on the corner of Humlegårdsgatan and Nybrogatan, a trading location of the most modern kind. At the same time, this meant that the square lost its original function. But today, with a temporary food hall occupying the square, we can speculate on the question “what if’ they had chosen, for example, to cover the market with a permanent building at its original location. How would that have changed Östermalm’s cityscape, and the function of the square?

Loss of surface area as a positive thing

128 years later, Östermalm’s Saluhall was in dire need of upgrading and development. During the two years of redevelopment, which Tengbom is also working on, the City of Stockholm has decided to erect a temporary building where trade can continue without the traders and regulars being affected too much. In order to accommodate all the traders and all the functions of the food hall, we were permitted to use the entire square area for the 1,970 square meter building. A tough nut to crack was to make the loss of urban space a positive thing. We solved this through careful architecture with a lot of character – a design that both attracts activity and traffic, but which also shows respect for the surroundings.

Temporary food hall
Photo: Felix Gerlach

Good architecture pays off

Prolonged opening hours in the temporary food hall have contributed to attracting the gaze of a younger target group, who are turning their attention to the food hall. That being said, you may think that the older and often returning clientèle would disappear, but that is also not the case.

The truth is that business is doing better now in the temporary hall compared to the Östermalm’s Saluhall, and the number of visitors has gone up.

Foto: Felix Gerlach
Photo: Felix Gerlach

Of course, this appeals to both traders and the City of Stockholm. So now our collaboration with the city will continue to take advantage of this unique atmosphere, with the ambition to bring it into the newly renovated hall in a few years. For us, this is strong evidence that good architecture pays off.

New old features

Östermalmstorg may look different today, with a structure of wood and plastic sheet panels placed at its centre. But great consideration has been taken to maintaining sight lines and lines of movement. For example, there is an entrance on all four sides of the building, in order for the existing flow of pedestrian traffic to function. The stalls are located along wide and straight lines of communication, which simplifies the orientation of the building. You can also see right through it, in order to orient yourself in the city and the square.

Temporary food hall
Photo: Felix Gerlach

Characteristic and temporary

We have designed a building with a frame of prefabricated modules that is quick to assemble and later dismantle when the building is taken out of service. It also creates the opportunity to reuse the hall in another location, possibly with a different function. Using wood as a material has several advantages. In this case its light weight played the biggest role in view of the difficult ground conditions of the square. It is also renewable and ecological, environmentally friendly, and climate smart. Externally, we clad the structure with untreated pine bars of varying sizes. The south-west corner and the south-east façade have large glass sections to offer views both in and out of the hall. The upper part of the market hall is fully clad in semi-transparent plastic sheet panels that let in a lot of daylight and lights up like a lantern in the evening.

Temporary food hall
Photo: Felix Gerlach

The challenge and the balance

We love a challenge. In this project the ground conditions were a significant contributing factor to this, among other things. The square slopes 1.9 metres, and is located directly above a metro station. The solutions we came up with have not only made the food hall possible. They also led to lasting improvements with replaced sewage pipes and modern garbage disposal solutions for the square, among other things.

Östermalmshallen padel

When Stockholm’s Östermalmshallen renovation was complete, and it was time to tear down the temporary Östermalmshall, the building was disassembled and shipped to Mölnlycke outside of Gothenburg, and rebuilt as a padel hall. In 2022 our temporary market hall from Stockholm was given a new lease on life. “First to six wins the game” is now the rule at Östermalmshallen Padel.

Awards

The temporary food hall has won the Design S award in the category of Architecture 2016. The Architizer A+ Award in the Commercial Retail 2017 Category. The Stockholm Chamber of Commerce’s Urban Environment Award 2017. The food hall was also nominated for the Mies van der Rohe Award in the late autumn of 2016.

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

Practice Director Stockholm
+46 8 412 53 43

Kikås Upcycling galleria

Galleria Reuse and circular economy
Architecture
Retail
Client: City of Mölndal
Years of comission: 2017 -
Project type: recykling galleria
Location: Kikås recykling centre, City of Mölndal

Tengbom, in collaboration with the City of Mölndal, has developed a concept for a recycling gallery where circular economics is embedded in the entire operation. Here is Kikås Upcycling galleria.

The City of Mölndal aims to dramatically reduce waste in the municipality by 2022. As part of this effort, the Kikås Upcycling Galleria provides visitors with valuable insights into recycling and reusing. To support this goal, Tengbomdesigned the space to make the recycling process both visible and engaging. Through an interactive experience, visitors can better understand how their choices impact sustainability and, over time, influence purchasing behaviour . Additionally, they can see and touch raw materials as they are transformed into new products. Ultimately, this transparent presentation strengthens customers’ understanding of the entire journey from waste to new products and encourages more conscious purchasing behavior.

Kikås Upcycling
Illustration: Tengbom

We took a holistic approach to create an attractive location that challenges the perception of a recycling center. The building’s placement acts as a screen, shielding the recycling area while maintaining visibility. With its own entrance to the upcycling mall, the design optimizes conditions for attracting visitors. The building itself embodies reusability and durability, using as many recycled building materials as possible.

Kikås Upcycling
Illustration: Tengbom

The upcycling mall in Kikås stands out for its workshops, where entrepreneurs both produce and sell their products on site. The entire core of the business operates within a 75-meter radius. It hardly gets more circular than that.

Contact person

Kajsa Crona

Practice Director Gothenburg
+46 727 07 79 73

Stockholm Central Station

Modern meeting place in a historical building
Stockholms Central Station 2014
Architecture
Infrastructure, Retail
Client: Jernhusen
Location: Stockholm
Years of commission: 2008–2015
Type of project: Travelling Centre
Partners: Ljusarkitektur
Competences: Infrastructure

250,000 people pass through Stockholm central station on a daily basis. If you were one of them, you would not have missed all the development that has been going on here between 2008–2014 – and a station that has been fully functional the entire time.

In 2008, Jernhusen asked us to modernize and develop large parts of Stockholm’s Central Station. As one of Sweden’s most important crossroads, the station needed to handle both current and future demands. The growing number of travelers made this especially crucial. With many separate improvements required, we had the chance to create a comprehensive development concept. This allowed us to approach the project holistically and ensure a cohesive transformation.

A meeting place that offers the unexpected

Jernhusen wanted Stockholm’s Central station to fulfil its potential as a meeting place for people from around the world. A modern travel centre with exceptional service, shops and restaurants that is safe, easy to navigate, accessible and where the environment and the details make a lasting impression on the visitors. To translate Jernhusen’s vision required a holistic approach but we also saw the opportunity to define some special areas that offer the visitors unexpected experiences.

Stockholms Centralstation Tengbom 2014
Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

It has been said that one of the easiest ways of judging a building is by visiting its toilets. To design very nice toilets felt obvious to us. Inspired by the romantic, Swedish landscape motifs that are painted on the walls of the Central Hall, we wanted to enhance the experience of being a traveller here too. With accents of wood, white glass and the picture of a sparkling fireplace, the design of the toilets is an abstraction of winter in the mountains – the cottages, snow and ice.

Stockholm Central Station Tengbom 2014
Photo: Åke E:son LIndman

Art, movement, and new meeting places

To let new art enhance places that would otherwise be boring and dead also offers something unexpected. We chose to decorate the empty space between the new stairs and the escalators that today lead from the north hall up to the City terminal. We were looking for a dynamic and digital experience and the choice was the artists Bigert and Bergström. Their installation, which shows tomorrows weather through atmospheric molecules of various colour were developed in consultation with us so that it can relate to the architecture in a seamless manner.

The third aspect is the new serving spaces. In the north hall, we designed a calm area which all guests can use, screened off through a low white wall from white composite material offering an open visual sight line both for the navigability and for security reasons.

Structural limitations creative solutions

Stockholm’s commuters will likely notice the biggest change beneath the Central Hall. We initiated the development of these spaces, working within the existing structural constraints. Since much of the structure is load-bearing, we had to stay within the original dimensions. Instead of altering the layout, we focused on creating a new and positive experience for travelers. Through a series of architectural strategies, we transformed the space without expanding it.

The streamlined environment, without sharp edges and corners, creating natural flows that leads the travellers on.

We wanted to create a light, airy and calming environment but could not change neither the width of the passage nor the height of the ceilings. A smooth, new fixed ceiling in white that softly arches up towards the Ring (the famous opening in the joists that connect the surface with the Central Hall above) and round recessed light sources that give the ceiling a hollow effect became part of the solution. Circle symbolism contained in the ring design is also found, for example, in the contrast marking of the windows and the rounded corners on the surface of new wall sections. The streamlined environment, without sharp edges and corners, creating natural flows that leads the travellers on.

To bring in as much natural light as possible and improve intuitive wayfinding, we enhanced vertical connections. We added two new openings, allowing stairs and escalators to lead up to the Central Hall. We also opened up existing load-bearing walls as much as possible. By setting the retail spaces one meter back from the main passage, we created a more open and spacious shopping area.

Stockholm Central Station Tengbom 2014
Photo: Åke E:son Lindman

Minimalist details enhance the listed building

We set out to highlight the original qualities of the Central Hall. The remaining parts of the Central Station from 1871, including the hall itself, are listed buildings. This meant we could not alter or distort the space. To respect the heritage, we took a minimalist approach. We worked with glass and slender steel details to introduce major changes while preserving the original atmosphere.

New shops and restaurants now fill the space, offering a wide range of products tailored to travelers’ needs. As architects, we advised on which commercial players should be given space. We also developed a detailed design manual for tenants, drawing inspiration from one of the station’s historic shop signs.

Contact person

Mark Humphreys

Practice Director Stockholm
+46 8 412 53 43

Pallas

The new trademark of Borås
Architecture, Urban Development
Idea & Vision, Residential, Retail
Client: BRA Bygg, Järngrinden, Cernera Fastigheter AB
Location: Borås
Years of commission: 2015-2017
Contractor: BRA Bygg
Type of project: Residential block with commercial space
Competences: Residential, Retail

On behalf of the property owners Järngrinden and Cernera, we are developing the block Pallas in central Borås, Sweden, with the intention of integrating the building better into the city. New apartments are being built on the roof, infusing the area with life around the clock. Pallas will be a new trademark for Borås, an excursion in the city.

The vision for the Pallas project is to recreate the benefits of a time when the area was full of optimism and a trust in the future. Therefore, it has been important to convey the design and function in a broader perspective. Architects Alessandro Ripellino developed the concept for Pallas and the team at Tengbom has been working on the construction documents for the project and also on the design of the new Pallas Tower. The original Domus building will be transformed into an attractive, vibrant, open and elegant neighbourhood in the centre of town.

Pallas
Visionary concept for Pallas. Illustration: Zynka

The vision for the Pallas project is to recreate the benefits of a time when the area was full of optimism and a trust in the future.

Homes on the roof and commercial space with a unique Borås identity

The two newly constructed residential storeys are located on top of the existing building with a steep roof which relates to the surrounding buildings. The apartments feature panoramic windows and therefore have a fantastic view of the town’s park and roof scape. The homes on the roof are located around a common green courtyard.

The block also features commercial space mainly on two levels and an indoor car park with approx. 320 spaces. The façades of the building of perforated stainless steel are meant to advertise and distinguish a commercial block with a ‘Borås identity’, at the same time as it is meant to make the parking spaces behind more diffuse. The connection between parking, shopping and living is enhanced and the building will be given new entrances and passages. In the last stage, the 33 storey high Pallas Tower will be constructed.

Pallas
Illustration: Zynka

The Pallas Tower – a signature building in Borås

With its 33 floors, the Pallas Tower will stand as a striking landmark, adding to the ambition of the Pallas project. Architecturally, it blends with the surrounding buildings while still making a bold statement. By building upwards, the project maximises space without encroaching on green areas or other urban spaces. At the same time, it reshapes how both residents and visitors experience Borås. And, of course, future occupants will enjoy an impressive view.

Contact person

Jerker Kryander

Studio Manager Borås
+46 31 775 52 28

Avion Shopping

To want to stay
Architecture, Interior Design
Retail
Client: Ikea Centres
Location: Umeå
Years of commission: 2011 - 2016
Contractor: Fastec
Type of project: Shopping mall
Areas of expertise: Retail, Interior Design

Shopping malls play an ever-greater role in our daily lives, in our cities and in our culture. In Umeå, we have designed Avion Shopping, a shopping mall with the ambition that the customers should want to repeat the experience again and again. Welcome.

On behalf of Ikano Retail, who later changed names to Ikea Centres, we designed the mall Avion Shopping in Umeå. The mall is built adjacent to an Ikea store, and the shopping mall in Umeå is one of Ikea Centres’ 58 shopping destinations around Europe.

Photo: Per Ranung

Our architects in charge are Emma Nilsby and Christer Blomqvist. They have the following story to tell:

“We have been involved in the project from the beginning to the end with the exception of the detailed planning. We stayed on as design architects during the construction stage and were even responsible for the interior concepts and the interior design of the public spaces. The concept we went with for the exterior was the feeling of a brilliant and reflecting ice crystal with associations to the location up north.”

The third living room

Avion Shopping is a 34,000 square metre large shopping centre with approximately 90 shops spread over two floors. There are six restaurants and five cafés. The orientation inside the building therefore, has been an important aspect for us, to accompany the visitor and make sure that the visit is a special experience that they would like to repeat. For that reason, we wanted to design the project as ‘the third living room’, after our homes and our workplaces. The mall should be both a meeting place and a destination, and therefore, the function is crucial. One result of this is that there are no dead ends in the mall – visitors are strolling along two oval circuits. This offers two clear lines of sight in the space and contributes to an increased ability to navigate the space.

Material and colours have been left natural, so there is for example a lot of ash on panels and floors. We tried to create a typically Scandinavian feel where the colours of the interiors reflect the seasons.

Avion Shopping
Photo: Sanna Lindberg

Not a box

Photo: Emma Nilsby

The exterior looks like a large box, there is no denying it. But we have tried to come away from the convention of the typical box-like architecture that so often dominates commercial projects. We have therefore, in consultation with Ikea Centres, developed a facade with sandwich elements of aluminium, on which we placed an undulating decorative expanded metal. But how can we get away from the ‘box’? Well, by working with trailer lights from above and down behind the facade, we create the impression that the building glitters at night and when the undulating shape is emphasised, it gives a much more three dimensional feel.

“We are happy that we managed to create this special and characterful facade. It was a bit of a risk or maybe a wish from our side but Ikea Centres were positive to it”, says Emma Nilsby.

The final result we reached by making a 1:1-scale model in consultation with the manufacturers.

Avion Shopping
Photo: Per Ranung

Trading places are and have historically always been important to us people

Location, location, location

A building where the logistics function as planned and the flow of people works well, the location of the shops follows in a natural way. We have been careful to make sure that every shop is visible and gets the opportunity to express its presence.

“Trading places are and have historically always been important meeting places for us people. In addition, they are often meeting places that we here at Tengbom try to make functional and useful. Moreover, malls are interesting environments for us to design, as they are spaces that everyone has access to but are still not really part of the public space. Therefore, we have started focusing on creating environments where people want to stay and mingle, that offer you excitement as well as playfulness”, says Emma Nilsby.

Contact person

Emma Nilsby

Practice Director Skåne
+46 40 641 31 43