Bays 6-8 Heritage Warehouse Office / BJB Architects
The Bays sets out to redefine the ?shared office? concept, by giving businesses the opportunity to occupy private spaces within a larger collective community. This creates a collaborative environment where good ideas come to grow.
© Mike Chorley
Architects: BJB Architects
Location: Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Area: 2500.0 m2
Project Year: 2018
Photographs: Mike Chorley
Builder: Infigo
Client: Work Inc.
© Mike Chorley
Text description provided by the architects. The Bays sets out to redefine the ?shared office? concept, by giving businesses the opportunity to occupy private spaces within a larger collective community. This creates a collaborative environment where good ideas come to grow.
© Mike Chorley
© Mike Chorley
Located under the northern approach to the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the industrial heritage of Bays 6, 7 and 8 has been preserved and enriched through the use of a raw, exposed steel structure and repurposed shipping containers. A strong focus on creating a richly textured and layered building fabric from raw and unfinished materials establishes a benchmark for responsible sustainable architecture.
© Mike Chorley
The adaptive reuse of The Bays, Middlemiss Street has breathed new life into an otherwise neglected space, whilst minimising resources and the footprint of the project, as well as protecting and showcas...
© Mike Chorley
Architects: BJB Architects
Location: Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Area: 2500.0 m2
Project Year: 2018
Photographs: Mike Chorley
Builder: Infigo
Client: Work Inc.
© Mike Chorley
Text description provided by the architects. The Bays sets out to redefine the ?shared office? concept, by giving businesses the opportunity to occupy private spaces within a larger collective community. This creates a collaborative environment where good ideas come to grow.
© Mike Chorley
© Mike Chorley
Located under the northern approach to the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the industrial heritage of Bays 6, 7 and 8 has been preserved and enriched through the use of a raw, exposed steel structure and repurposed shipping containers. A strong focus on creating a richly textured and layered building fabric from raw and unfinished materials establishes a benchmark for responsible sustainable architecture.
© Mike Chorley
The adaptive reuse of The Bays, Middlemiss Street has breathed new life into an otherwise neglected space, whilst minimising resources and the footprint of the project, as well as protecting and showcas...
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