Zaha Hadid Architects
Central Building - BMW Plant
Leipzig, Germany

Photo ©Thomas Mayer
The Central Building is the active nerve-centre or brain of the whole factory complex. All threads of the building’s activities gather together and branch out again from here.
This planning strategy applies to the cycles and trajectories of people - workers and visitors - as well as for the cycle and progress of the production line which traverses this central point - departing and returning again.

Photo ©Thomas Mayer
This dynamic focal point of the enterprise is made visually evident in the proposed dynamic spatial system that encompasses the whole northern front of the factory and articulates the central building as the point of confluence and culmination of the various converging flows. It seems as if the whole of the expanse on this side of the factory is oriented and animated by a force field emanating from the central building. All movement converging on the site is funnelled through this compression chamber squeezed in-between the three main segments of production: Body in White, Paint Shop and Assembly.

Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer
The organization of the building exploits the obvious sequence of front to back for the phasing of public/busy to more withdrawn/quiet activities. The facade envelope is pulled in under a large diagonally projecting top floor. Here the car drop-off swoops underneath letting off visitors into the glazed public lobby.
Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer
The primary organizing strategy is the scissor-section that connects ground floor and first floor into a continuos field.
two sequences of terraced plates - like giant staircases - step up from north to south and from south to north. One commences close to the public lobby passing by/overlooking the forum to reach the first floor in the middle of the building. The other cascade starts with the cafeteria at the south end moving up to meet the first cascade then moving all the way up to the space projecting over the entrance.

Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer
The two cascading sequences capture a long connective void between them. At the bottom this void is the auditing area as the central focus of everybody’s attention. Above the void the half-finished cars are moving along their track between the various surrounding production units open to view.

Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer

Photo ©Thomas Mayer
For model and drawings view arcspace 2002 feature:
BMW Plant competition winner
Total area: 25,000 square meters
Completed: 2005
Photographed by Thomas Mayer
Client: BMW AG
Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects
Design: Zaha Hadid with Patrik Schumacher
Project Architects: Jim Heverin/Lars Teichmann (Zaha Hadid)
Design team:
Lars Teichmann
Eva Pfannes
Kenneth Bostock
Stephane Hof
Djordje Stojanovic
Leyre Villoria
Liam Young
Christina Fashek
Manuela Gatto
Tina Gregoric
Cesare Griffa
Yasha Jacob Grobman
Filippo Innocenti
Zetta Kotsioni
Debora Laub
Sarah Manning
Maurizio Meossi
Robert Sedlak
Niki Neerpasch
Eric Tong
Project team:
Lars Teichmann
Jim heverin
Jan Huebener
Matthias Frei
Cornelius Schlotthauer
Fabian Hecker
Wolfgang Sunder
Manuela Gatto
Anette Bresinsky
Anneka Wegener
Achim Gergen
Robert Neumayr
Christina Beaumont
Caroline Anderson
Landscape Architect: Gross. Max (Edinburgh, UK)
Structural Engineer:
IFB Dr. Braschel AG (Stuttgart, germany)
Anthony Hunt Associates (London, UK)
Lighting Design: Equation Design (London, UK)
Zaha Hadid arcspace features
January 16, 2006
