De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten

De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Interior Photography, Beam, ColumnDe Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Interior Photography, Facade, Beam, SteelDe Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Image 4 of 18De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Exterior Photography, FacadeDe Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - More Images+ 13

  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1415
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2012
  • Photographs
    Photographs:Thijs Wolzak
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Saint-Gobain, Wienerberger, Acosorb, Brakel Atmos, De Groot Vroomshoop, Jazo, Keers, Luxaflex
  • Lead Architects: Herman Zeinstra & Gianni Cito
More SpecsLess Specs
De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Exterior Photography, Waterfront
© Thijs Wolzak

Text from the book ‘Goodbye Architecture’. This crematorium in Amsterdam- Noord shows how an intelligent architectural concept can make a major contribution to people’s experience of the funeral ritual. Because the architects did not approach the crematorium as a single building, but as a succession of moments, the complex is flexible and offers visitors room to quietly experience the greenery between the buildings.

De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Interior Photography, Windows, Chair, Beam
© Thijs Wolzak

De Nieuwe Noorder is situated in Amsterdam Noord along the Noordhollandsch Kanaal, just outside the centre of the city, in the cemetery of the same name. This cemetery is accessible from the Amsterdam canals by the IJ and regularly used for a funeral over water. Relatives board a funeral boat in the city centre of Amsterdam and sail to De Nieuwe Noorder together with the deceased.

De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Image 4 of 18
© Thijs Wolzak

The original 1931 design of the cemetery was arranged along a central axis, but extensions and alterations have left the original structure barely recognizable. In the design of the architects, the structure with the former auditorium as the centre is restored. This refurbished auditorium now serves as a waiting area and is central to an ensemble of pavilions in an open space that are connected by colonnades. On one side of the waiting area is a pavilion with storage spaces and the funeral directors’ offices, on the other side is the pavilion with the technical crematorium and the condolence room where visitors meet after the funeral. Beyond the waiting area is the new auditorium, placed in a water feature that reflects the building and the sky. To get there, visitors literally have to cross the water to another world. The auditorium has glass walls and a wooden structure and is free-standing, open to the outside, in the middle of the cemetery, which is also a nature reserve because special indigenous plants and animals live here. 

De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Image 11 of 18
Floor Plan
De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Image 14 of 18
Sections

The auditorium, condolence room, offices, waiting area and technical crematorium have been designed separately. ‘Rather than a very large, solid building, we wanted to make separate, flexible pavilions. For people’s perception, it’s also important to go from the inside to the outside so that they can experience all the elements of nature. So we really tried to incorporate a moment of reflection,’ says architect Gianni Cito. There’s a cross discernible in the floor plan; this isn’t a religious reference, but it anchors the crematorium in its surroundings and restores the historical structure of the axially ordered cemetery. 

De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Interior Photography, Beam, Column
© Thijs Wolzak

The auditorium seats approximately 100 people and there’s standing room for about 100 more. At really big funerals, people can follow the ceremony on a video screen in the waiting area and the condolence room. In most cases, visitors gather for the farewell service in the waiting area, while relatives meet separately in the family room or share a final moment with the deceased in one of the funerariums. After the farewell service, the coffin and the visitors can be escorted to different places. People are taken to the condolence room, on to the cemetery or to the technical crematorium. The committal room is decorated in such a way that, if people want to, a small number of them can be present at the committal of the coffin. 

De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten - Image 6 of 18
© Thijs Wolzak

Project gallery

See allShow less

Project location

Address:Amsterdam, The Netherlands

Click to open map
Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "De Nieuwe Noorder / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten" 26 Apr 2019. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/915776/de-nieuwe-noorder-moke-architecten> ISSN 0719-8884

© Thijs Wolzak

阿姆斯特丹‘新秩序’火葬场 / Dok Architecten + Moke Architecten

You've started following your first account!

Did you know?

You'll now receive updates based on what you follow! Personalize your stream and start following your favorite authors, offices and users.