Integrated Transportation Centre in Lublin, Poland

Metropolitan Station

Tremend Architecture Studio
20. February 2024
Photo © Rafal Chojnacki
Project: Metropolitan Station / Integrated Transportation Centre, 2023
Location: Lublin, Poland
Client: Lublin City Hall
Architect: Tremend Architecture Studio
Photo © Rafal Chojnacki
A new symbol of the city

The Metropolitan Station building has canopied platforms with terminals for urban and regional road transport, an underground parking lot for cars, taxi bays, as well as cycle stands and racks. The project also envisages a roof garden open to the public. The city square and adjacent green spaces have been given a modern makeover and a new road system improving traffic flow has also been built. The team at Tremend Architecture Studio, headed by lead designer Magdalena Federowicz-Boule, was involved in the conceptual design, architectural and construction design, and in the tender detailed design, followed by supervision throughout the entire implementation process, right up to completion in December 2023.

Photo © Rafal Chojnacki
A driver of regeneration

Metropolitan Station was built in the central part of Lublin, in the direct vicinity of the listed 19th-century Lublin Central Railway Station. Clearly, the design not only had to accommodate the most optimal and functional traffic management systems but also blend in with the urban and architectural context of the place. Additionally, regeneration and providing an impetus for the activation of the post-industrial area in the immediate surroundings of the railway station were particularly important facets for the designers.

Photo © Rafal Chojnacki

In their original concept, Tremend proposed a simple, modernist pavilion intended to contrast with the eclectic, historical style of the Central Railway Station while remaining unchallenging of it, thanks to its clearly different architectural language. The distinct openwork pillars that are part of the steel structure of the railway station and the platform canopy roofs that also serve a decorative function give it its unique architectural expression. Their linear, somewhat organic forms are reminiscent of intertwined tree trunks, giving an air of lightness to the entire edifice. Stainless steel and glass were also used as construction materials.

Photo © Rafal Chojnacki
“The implementation of technologies and materials that are environmentally friendly and limit the carbon footprint of constructions make it one of the most ecologically sound and energy efficient buildings of its kind in Poland.”

Magdalena Federowicz-Boule 

Photo © Rafal Chojnacki
Environmentally friendly design

The underlying idea behind the project was to create a facility that will be an example of a public investment in the spirit of sustainable architecture. The minimization of the carbon footprint has for years been the priority for architects at Tremend, which is why the Metropolitan Station in Lublin was designed as one of the most environmentally friendly structures of its kind in Poland. The project fulfills the highest standards in the scope of sustainable development. The project’s “box in a box” solution and the environmentally friendly specifications of the glazed façades reduce energy consumption. Concrete, as one of the principal building materials, is a low-emissivity material. Almost three hundred square meters of the surface area is covered by an outdoor vertical garden. The installation of a greywater system allows harvested rainwater to be used for landscape irrigation and flushing toilets.

Photo © Rafal Chojnacki

Solutions like ventilation systems with up to 80 percent heat recovery and a naturally ventilated underground car park in the form of an open atrium supporting air circulation are just some of the pro-environmental values of this development. Radiant heating and cooling driven by cascade heat pumps using 42 boreholes have also been designed in passenger areas. Clad in transparent glass with integrated photovoltaic cells, the dual function smart bus shelter canopy shielding 43 pocket bus stands that darken in the sun afford shading and protection and harvest solar energy to power up the station. Energy-efficient HVAC systems allow for individual control of temperature settings in different areas of the facility and time-clock scheduling. A smart lighting control system and energy-efficient lighting have also been incorporated, reducing the energy consumption by limiting the illumination of the building and the surrounding area, whereas the self-cleaning concrete pavers contribute to reducing air pollution.

Photo © Rafal Chojnacki

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