Aytaç Architects, a multi award-winning firm that strives to create powerful and clear design solutions unique to their surroundings, proudly introduce Zenel, a 14-story residential building that has distinguished itself within the Turkish coastal landscape. Zenel, located in the upscale Erenköy neighborhood in what’s commonly known as Istanbul’s Asian side, rises above a 1,138m² site situated near vibrant Bağdat Avenue, which runs approximately 14 km from east to west along the coastline of the Sea of Marmara.
As opposed to old Istanbul, this relatively new neighborhood has been developed with a grid pattern formed by the east-west axis of Bağdat Avenue. Accordingly, the ground plane of the building site follows the “Bağdat Grid” parallel to the avenue, while the aerial plane of Zenel rotates southward towards the Prince Islands, an archipelago located approximately 10 km south of the Sea of Marmara coast.
That combination of forces allows the building to torque, from top to bottom, between the Bağdat grid and views of the islands, creating a sort of crystallized molten rock effect that is rugged and weathered on the outside, but pristine and polished on the inside.
At its base, Zenel is surrounded by a reflecting pool that delineates its boundaries, serving as a kind of moat that separates its presence from the surrounding cityscape. Paradoxically, the reflecting pool also creates a strong social connection with the neighbourhood and its residents, with colourful fish and hydroponic plants serving as an attraction for locals. Crossing the reflecting pool, a bridge leads to the building’s entry through a porous facade, the latter being reminiscent of eroded rock. Water seeps through an undulated entrance wall behind the facade, creating a unique and transitional space.
Each apartment in the Zenel building offers a unique aperture to frame the city through lateral facades facing its neighbouring buildings, while simultaneously creating a sense of intimacy for its residents. Each apartment is heated and cooled by an air-to-water heat pump system, which dramatically reduces the carbon footprint of the building.
Zenel’s unique lateral facades are equipped with state-of-the-art technology to protect residents from potentially harmful electromagnetic radiation emitted by mobile phone masts scattered throughout the city. Additionally, combined with the building’s silver-coated glass facades, the lateral facades create a protective Faraday cage around the building.
“Zenel is a prime example of our firm’s focus on developing architecture that transgresses the normal boundaries of traditional forms and materials,” concludes Alper Aytaç, founder of Aytaç Architects.
Founded in 2005 by Alper Aytaç in Istanbul, Turkey, Aytaç Architects is an award-winning architecture and research practice that endeavors to produce new interactions with objects, spaces, and buildings in order to harness and release their latent creative forces. The firm’s office operates as a laboratory dedicated to rendering space and the built environment more mobile, dynamic, and active.
Using digital and analog design tools, the multi-award-winning office strives to create powerful and clear design solutions that are unique to each project and site, based on deep analysis of cultural and physical layers. The full-service practice engages in building design, urban design, interiors, and landscape design at all scales.
The work of Aytac Architects has been published extensively in prominent architectural and lifestyle publications worldwide.
Photo credit: Cemal Emden
Press releases in partnership with cChic News and cChic Magazine