Our design is rooted in respect and futurity. It connects historic building fabric with contem­porary use. It connects the city with the Hofgarten. It connects different faculties through short circu­lation routes. It connects students, academics, and visitors. And it connects tradition with innovation for a modern university that carries its archi­tec­tural heritage with dignity.

A Palace for the Future

 

The former Electoral Palace has been the heart of student life in Bonn since 1818. This landmark structure sits embedded between the historic old town and the Hofgarten, along the axis toward Poppelsdorf Palace, a defining symbol of the Rhine Friedrich Wilhelm University.

Our aim: to achieve the greatest possible outcome through a minimal number of carefully considered inter­ven­tions. A university that bears its long archi­tec­tural history with dignity while simul­ta­neously meeting the demands of contem­porary pedagogy. The new circu­lation strategy opens the building to the urban realm, creates permea­bility, and gives rise to repre­sen­tative spaces. Barrier-free, legible, and fit for the future.

A respectful approach to the existing building fabric forms the foundation of our design. Following the principles of the Venice Charter, we add a new, clearly legible layer to the building’s archi­tec­tural timeline. The building envelope and exterior character remain unaltered. Necessary additions are deployed as effec­tively and as sensi­tively as possible.

The most signi­ficant inter­ven­tions are concen­trated in the western section of the building and are barely percep­tible from the exterior. The light-flooded roof struc­tures over the Lichthof and Blumenhof, the level compen­sation, the restrained vertical extension. The rooftop addition re-estab­lishes the historic three-storey articu­lation. The new glazed roof over the Blumenhof references its historic precedent through a contem­porary reinter­pre­tation.

Legible Strata of Time

Lageplan der Universität Bonn. Das Bild ist in verschiedenen Grautönen gezeichnet.
Axonometrische Darstellung baulicher Eingriffe im historischen Gebäudekomplex der Universität Bonn. Visualisierung von Dachaufbauten, Volumenergänzungen und Umbau­maßnahmen im Kontext von Denkmalschutz und Bestandssanierung.

Circu­lation: Two Axes, Countless Connec­tions

Two primary axes traverse the building like arteries. In the north–south direction, the generous opening of the Hofgarten portal creates an attractive, fully acces­sible connection between the city and the Hofgarten, a permea­bility that invites passage. In the east–west direction, we establish an axis of short routes: from the Arkadenhof through the newly confi­gured Lichthof to the Blaue Grotte and onward to the adjacent university facilities.

The Lichthof, currently a utili­tarian service courtyard, becomes the luminous heart of the complex. Covered and flooded with natural light, it merges with the historic foyer to form a welcoming entrance sequence. Between the Arkadenhof, foyer, and Lichthof, a repre­sen­tative ensemble emerges with considerable flexi­bility for a wide range of programmes.

The principle of the ambulatory, derived from the Arkadenhof, is consis­t­ently applied across all levels as a conti­nuous circu­lation corridor. Horizontal circu­lation meets vertical access, a clear, legible system. Each circu­lation space is given its own identity through colour and formal treatment. Wayfinding becomes intuitive.

All areas are made fully and uncon­di­tio­nally acces­sible. Level changes are carefully negotiated; remaining steps are resolved through ramps and stair­cases. Eight lift instal­la­tions provide vertical access throughout the building, easily located and paired with the stair­wells. Four of these are positioned at the corners of the central ambulatory, functioning as orien­tation markers through the palace.

Acces­si­bility: Universal as a Matter of Course

Spatial Organi­sation: Where Every­thing Converges

Students, academics, and visitors enter the central foyer via the Arkadenhof, the repre­sen­tative prelude to their visit. Public-facing uses are arranged around the Arkadenhof: the student centre as the primary point of contact, and the bistro as a student café with external seating that opens onto the Arkadenhof, the Ehrenhof, and the Blaue Grotte.

Event spaces are distri­buted across two key locations, reinforcing the campus character. Student workspaces are positioned centrally at the circu­lation cores. Easy to locate and in close proximity to lecture halls and seminar rooms. Logical adjacencies emerge: faculties border one another; functions are situated where they are needed.

Museum and Palace Café: Culture as Connector

The prominent position along the Hofgarten makes the Kaiser­platz wing the ideal location for the three museums. A dedicated entrance opens the collec­tions to the public independently of the daily academic routine.

The new roof structure over the Blumenhof creates a generous, naturally lit space for the Egyptian Museum, a reinter­pre­tation of the historic glazed roof. This space accom­mo­dates lectures, concerts, and recep­tions, bringing people together. The museums become an integral part of both university life and the cultural fabric of Bonn.

The palace café serves as the interface between students and the wider public. A generous terrace opening onto the Hofgarten invites visitors to linger.

We do not build anew, we build on. The sensitive inter­ven­tions into the existing structure are both sustainable and econo­mically sound. Our energy and climate concept priori­tises passive strategies: windows are upgraded in accordance with heritage conser­vation requi­re­ments; the massive masonry construction stores thermal energy; night-time venti­lation replaces mecha­nical cooling.

A ground­water heat pump supplies the building with energy. Photo­voltaic modules integrated into the roof surfaces and glazed Lichthof roof generate appro­xi­m­ately 280 MWh per year, around 30 percent of the building’s energy demand from solar gain. Rainwater infil­trates through soakaways, irrigates the Hofgarten, and is collected in cisterns. Resources are conserved; material cycles are closed.

New roof struc­tures are realised in timber construction. Laminated beech carries the glazed roofs over the Lichthof and Blumenhof. The glazing combines solar shading with energy generation. Natural venti­lation, generous ceiling heights, operable windows. The building breathes.

Sustaina­bility: Future within the Existing Fabric

The listed spaces are preserved as witnesses of their time: the colon­naded hall, the palace chapel, the stair­wells, the Aula. The new circu­lation concept brings clarity and legibility to the entire complex.

Office and commu­ni­cation areas follow the principles of New Work: flexible workspaces designed for knowledge exchange. A spatial furniture element, conceived as a shelving system, accom­mo­dates tea kitchens, individual offices, and meeting rooms, with open-plan areas on the opposite side. Each faculty is assigned a distinct colour for orien­tation purposes. In the main wing, green predo­mi­nates at doorframes and along the sculp­tural staircase in the Lichthof.

Existing floor finishes are retained. New terrazzo in the circu­lation areas and timber parquet in seminar and office spaces complement the existing fabric. New materials are legible and timeless. The dialogue between old and new becomes visible, palpable, and inhabi­table.

Design Quality: Old and New in Dialogue

Location
Bonn
Type
Urban Develo­pment
Client
Bau- und Liegen­schafts­be­trieb NRW Köln
Time Frame
2025
Services
Compe­tition Entry (Commen­dation)
Status
Concept
Visua­lization
&MICA

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