Music Academy Staufen: A Contemporary Cultural Landmark by Bez+Kock Architekten
Monolithic brick music academy organizes performance, rehearsal, and living spaces vertically, creating a bold cultural landmark within Staufen’s industrial context.
Located on the north-western outskirts of Staufen im Breisgau, the Music Academy of the Federation of German Wind Music Associations establishes a strong cultural presence within an otherwise anonymous industrial estate. Designed by Bez+Kock Architekten, the project transforms a peripheral site into an identity-defining architectural landmark, combining robust materiality with a carefully articulated spatial hierarchy.

Architectural Concept and Urban Response
The new Music Academy responds deliberately to its faceless surroundings through a compact, sculptural volume clad entirely in water-struck clinker brick. This homogeneous material treatment gives the building a monolithic clarity while anchoring it firmly within the regional building tradition. Rather than blending into the industrial context, the academy asserts itself as a civic and cultural destination, establishing a clear address and sense of arrival.
A centrally positioned foyer cuts through the building along a north, south axis, functioning as both spatial connector and social heart. This generous internal void visually and physically links the different programmatic layers, reinforcing orientation and encouraging interaction among students, performers, and visitors.

Spatial Organization and Functional Stacking
The internal organization follows a clear principle of vertical stacking, allowing the diverse functions of the academy to coexist efficiently within a compact footprint. Public and semi-public spaces are concentrated on the lower levels, while more private uses gradually move upward.
The first floor accommodates the large concert and rehearsal halls, alongside the dining facilities and administrative areas. These spaces form the most public layer of the building, supporting performances, events, and daily institutional life. A single-flight staircase leads upward to the second floor, where smaller rehearsal rooms are arranged around the dramatic two-storey hall. This central space acts as an acoustic and social core, reinforced by two centrally located bar and lounge areas that serve as informal meeting points and zones of exchange.


Residential Floors and Acoustic Privacy
Above the teaching and rehearsal spaces, the two upper floors house a total of sixty single and double guest rooms for academy participants. The residential levels are conceived as calm retreats, carefully separated from the more active musical spaces below. Each room is assigned a precisely positioned window, ensuring daylight and views while maintaining acoustic and visual privacy essential for rest and concentration.

Facade Articulation and Architectural Expression
The functional stacking of the building is clearly legible on the exterior through the sculptural articulation of the clinker brick façade. The first floor is characterized by large trapezoidal windows, emphasizing openness and signaling the building’s public cultural role. In contrast, the second floor features a strictly ordered band of smaller openings, subtly concealing the rehearsal rooms behind a disciplined rhythm.
The upper residential floors are distinguished by perforated window openings, each corresponding to an individual room. This façade strategy balances uniformity and variation, expressing the internal program while maintaining a cohesive architectural identity.


A New Cultural Anchor
Completed in 2024 with a total floor area of 5,750 square meters, the Music Academy Staufen exemplifies contemporary cultural architecture rooted in clarity, durability, and spatial intelligence. Through its powerful material presence, legible organization, and carefully modulated façade, the building transcends its industrial context to become a new cultural anchor for Staufen im Breisgau, offering an environment where music, learning, and community intersect.


All photographs are works of Peter Ziegner
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