Jean Monnet 2 building
Jean Monnet 2 building | |
---|---|
Alternative names | JMO2 |
General information | |
Status | Under construction |
Type | Office complex for the European Commission |
Location | Boulevard Konrad Adenauer, Kirchberg, Luxembourg City, Luxembourg |
Coordinates | 49°37′28″N 6°08′49″E / 49.624534°N 6.146920°E |
Named for | Jean Monnet |
Groundbreaking | 4 June 2018 |
Estimated completion | February 2023 (Block) February 2024 (Tower) |
Cost | €526,300,000 |
Client | Luxembourg government on behalf of the European Commission |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 8 (Block, excluding basement) 24 (Tower, excluding basement) |
Floor area | 138,000 m2 (gross) (Block) 52,000 m2 (gross) (Tower) |
Design and construction | |
Architecture firm | KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten |
Services engineer | EDEIS |
Civil engineer | Bollinger+Grohmann Ing. |
Main contractor | Secolux Group S.A. |
The Jean Monnet 2 building (also known as JMO2) is a future office complex for the European Commission under construction on Boulevard Konrad Adenauer in the European district of the Luxembourg City quarter of Kirchberg, Luxembourg. The complex is to be composed of a welcome pavilion and two office buildings to be completed in two phases respectively; an 8-storey 180 metre (m) long block and a 24-storey tower, connected at the basement and second storey levels. The first phase was expected to be completed by late February 2023, and the second phase by late February 2024. This timetable has been pushed back due to the global COVID-19 pandemic. The first Jean Monnet building, opened in 1975, was demolished between 2016 and 2019, after exceeding its lifespan, and following the discovery of airborne traces of asbestos. The construction site combines some of the plot of the previous building with an adjacent former open air car park. Upon completion, the Jean Monnet 2 building will enable the European Commission to consolidate the majority of its Luxembourg-based staff on one site. Like its predecessor, the building's namesake is European Union (EU) founding father Jean Monnet.
Background
[edit]History of the Commission in Luxembourg
[edit]The European Commission's presence in Luxembourg City goes back to 1952, when the city was chosen as the provisional work place of the Commission's forerunner, the High Authority of the European Coal and Steel Community (ECSC).[1] Upon the 1958 foundations of the European Economic Community (EEC) and European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom), the governments of the communities' states decided that their executive commissions, would have their seats split between Brussels and Luxembourg.[1] This arrangement was maintained following the 1965 decision to merge the executives of the three communities, into a single Commission.[1]
Original Jean Monnet building
[edit]In 1961, the Luxembourg government began promoting the Luxembourg City quarter of Kirchberg as a basis for European institutions, with the founding of the Kirchberg Plateau Development Fund (or Kirchberg Fund) — an urban development body of the government.[2] In the early 1970s, construction began on the first Jean Monnet building (JMO1), commissioned by the Luxembourg government on land owned by the Fund, with its aim being to consolidate all the European Commission's existing Luxembourg based staff onto one site.[3] In 1975, the Commission moved in, signing a lease agreement with the Kirchberg Fund.[3]
However, the building was constructed with an intended lifespan of just 25 years, and additionally, was planned to accommodate the staffing requirements of a European Communities of just 9 states and a Commission of more limited responsibilities.[3] The European Council's decision, taken in Edinburgh in 1992, to codify the Commission's workplaces as Brussels and Luxembourg City,[1] led to discussions, starting in 1994 on renovating the Jean Monnet building, and finding more suitable premises across the city to accommodate staffing needs.[4] In 1996, the Commission moved into the Joseph Bech building, constructed in northeastern Kirchberg.
The Commission's need for more office accommodation intensified following the 2004 EU enlargement from 15 to 25 states, and the subsequent increase in staff numbers.[5] A 2007 policy communication from the Commission's Office of Infrastructure and Logistics, stated that, at the time of publication, the Commission occupied 5 office premises in Luxembourg City; 2 in Kirchberg, and 3 in Gasperich.[5] It said that the institution was making inefficient use of office space across the city, with the occupation of too many smaller office premises; it was spending too much money on the rental of properties; its staff was spread out too far from other supporting services such as crèches and schooling; and the current Jean Monnet building was ill-equipped to handle the hosting the Commission's IT and data services.[5] To that end, the communication stated that Commission policy would be to push for a total rebuild of the then existing Jean Monnet building, with the Commission taking ownership of the future property.[5]
Agreement on a new building
[edit]In September 2009, the Luxembourg government and the Commission signed a memorandum of understanding, in which the Luxembourg government agreed to hand over a plot of land for the construction of a new Jean Monnet building to the Commission for the symbolic price of 1 euro, and furthermore for the Luxembourg government to finance its construction and be reimbursed from the EU budget upon its completion and subsequent transfer of ownership to the Commission.[6] This ended a long-term dispute, which since April 1998, had seen the Commission refuse to enter a tenancy agreement for the building over protest at its condition, and its belief that this was not adequately reflected in the rental fees requested by the Kirchberg Fund, instead paying a flat "occupation fee".[4]
Design
[edit]Architectural competition
[edit]In 2010 the Luxembourg government launched an international architectural competition for the design of the new building, with architectural firm JSWD Architekten's design unanimously awarded first prize by jurors.[7][8] However, due to a dispute between the Luxembourg Ministry of Sustainable Development and JSWD Architekten over contractual fees, the runner-up design by KSP Jurgen Engel Architekten was later selected.[9]
Phased approach
[edit]In line with the criteria of the architectural competition, the final design of the Jean Monnet 2 complex sees it being completed in two phases, with the first phase accommodating staff displaced during the demolition of the original building, and the second stage accommodating staff relocating from Commission offices in Gasperich:[7][3]
- Phase 1 will consist of an 8 storey tall 180 m long main block, with 4 glass-roofed inner courtyards and its technical infrastructure housed in the top storey.[3] It will have a gross surface area of approximately 138,000 square metres (m2), and work stations for 2,400 staff.[3] The building will include four basement levels, which extend under the forecourt of the joint building complex, three of which will be dedicated to car parking.[3]
- Phase 2 consists of a 24-storey tower, with its technical infrastructure also housed in the top storey.[3] It will have a gross surface area of approximately 52,000 m2, with 4 floors of parking in the basement, and provide work stations for 1,200 staff.[3]
The main block and tower will be linked at the basement level and via an enclosed footbridge connecting their second storeys.[3] A landscaped forecourt will be created at the ground level between the two buildings, with a separate "Welcome Pavilion", acting as a visitors centre, facing Boulevard Konrad Adenauer to be constructed in front of the tower and adjacent to the main block.[3]
Facilities and logistics
[edit]The ground floor and first 2 floors of the basement level of the main block will contain all facilities open to resident Commission employees, inter-institutional employees and visitors.[3] This includes;
- the dining areas consisting of a 120-seat cafeteria, a 1,200 seat self-service restaurant equipped to serve 2,400 meals per day, and an 80-seat à la carte restaurant;
- a conference centre with a capacity of 1,260 seats, including a large 350 seat auditorium and 5 conference rooms, all equipped with interpretation booths;
- a library;
- a health centre and gyms;
- a medical centre;
- a retail space.[3]
Logistical services associated with running the building, including, amongst others, the postal sorting room and changing rooms for service staff will be mainly located on the first basement floor of the main block, whilst the basement levels of the tower will hold the office complexes' archiving facilities.[3]
Energy efficiency
[edit]The building was designed to meet class "A" energy performance requirements and BREEAM's "excellent" level certification.[3] The design includes, amongst other energy efficiency features, triple-glazed windows, radiant ceiling panels, offices designed to optimise the use of natural light, an all LED artificial lighting installation, and roof mounted photovoltaic panels.[3] The building will be connected to Kirchberg's existing district heating system via two heat exchanges.[3]
Location
[edit]The building will occupy a plot of land along Boulevard Konrad Adenauer, which forms its northern edge, and is bordered by rue Erasme to the east, and rue Antoine de Saint-Exupéry to the south, which will be extended to border the complex to west and meet with Boulevard Konrad Adenauer.[nb 1][3] The site combines some of the plot of the previous Jean Monnet building, on which the tower will sit, with an adjacent former open air car park to the east, where the main block will sit.[3] Rue Albert Wehrer, which currently intersects the site, will be converted for pedestrian use only and made a part of the complexes' forecourt.[3]
The site will occupy the Kirchberg's European district.[3] To the building's southwest, along Boulevard Konrad Adenauer is the seat of the Court of Justice of the European Union, and to its south, across rue Antoine de Saint-Exupéry is the IAK building, currently occupied by the European Investment Bank.[2] Further to the south are located the seat of the European Court of Auditors, and the Konrad Adenauer building, housing the European Parliament's secretariat.[2]
Construction
[edit]Demolition of the original building
[edit]A 2015 memorandum of understanding between the Luxembourg government and the European Commission aimed for October 2020 as the target date for the completion of phase 1 of the new building.[10] However, revisions to the security concept for the building and changes related to data centre space, introduced in December 2016, set the target date for completion of phase 1 of the building back to February 2023, with Phase 2 expected by February 2024.[10] This timetable was further delayed owing to the global COVID-19 pandemic.
Whilst the criteria set down in the design competition specified the first Jean Monnet building remaining occupied during the construction of the first phase of the new complex,[7] the 2014 discovery of airborne traces of asbestos in the original building[11] led the Commission to begin transferring staff off premises in late 2014, relocating them to other additional office premises in the Gare and Gasperich quarters of the city, and a temporary building constructed in Kirchberg in 2016 by the Luxembourg government.[12][13]
Demolition works on the former building began in 2016, following the formal closure of the former building. Around 400 tonnes of aluminium, 150 tonnes of glass and 45 tonnes of wood were recycled from the structure in the process. Demolition works were completed in late 2019 at a cost of €25 million.[14]
Construction of the new building
[edit]Preparatory work began in March 2018,[3] and a groundbreaking ceremony for the construction of new building was held on 4 June 2018 in the presence of Mayor of Luxembourg City, Lydie Polfer, European Commissioner, Günther Oettinger, Prime Minister of Luxembourg, Xavier Bettel and Luxembourg Minister for Infrastructure, François Bausch.[15][16][17]
Contractors
[edit]The JMO2's design team consists of KSP Jürgen Engel Architekten as the lead architectural firm, civil engineering by Bollinger+Grohmann Ing and services engineering by EDEIS.[3] The Luxembourg government appointed Secolux to as the prime contractor for the project.[17][3]
Cost and financing
[edit]The new building has a cost, estimated in October 2015, of 526.3 million euros.[17] This will initially be borne by the Luxembourg government, and reimbursed from the EU budget upon the handing over of the completed phases.[9] The land on which the building stands, which has an estimated market value of 300 million euros,[9] was sold by the Luxembourg government to the Commission for the symbolic price of 1 euro.[9]
Prospective tenants
[edit]The Jean Monnet 2 building is designed to accommodate more than 3,600 European Commission staff.[3] At the end of phase 1 of the construction process all those staff currently in the Bech, Ariane, Drosbach, and Hitec buildings, located elsewhere in Luxembourg City, will be relocated to the JMO2, followed by those in the Laccolith, and T2 buildings at the end of phase 2.[10]
Name
[edit]Like the original complex, the new building will bear the name of EU founding father, and first President of the High Authority of the European Coal and Steel Community, Jean Monnet.[nb 2]
Transport
[edit]In addition to the car parking facilities envisaged for the building, the site will be served by regional and municipal buses serving the "Jean Monnet" bus stop on Boulevard Konrad Andeauer, located in front of the building's welcome pavilion.[3] Trams services running on Avenue John F. Kennedy will be available a short distance to the south of the office complex from either the "Europaparlament / Parlement Européen" or "Coque" tram stops.[3]
Bicycle parking facilities for approximately 160 bicycles will be installed in the tower building, with the Luxembourg City authorities aiming to improve the network of bike paths to the site.[3]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ The reconfiguration of the road layout around the site was originally drawn up by urban development planner Dominique Perrault's architectural bureau, based on studies commissioned by the Kirchberg Fund.[2]
- ^ Monnet was also a strong proponent of Luxembourg as the single seat of the European project.[18]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d Valls, Raquel (8 July 2016). "The seats of the institutions of the European Union". CVCE.EU by UNI.LU. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ a b c d "Urban Planning in the European Quarter of the Kirchberg Plateau" (PDF). Revue Technique Luxembourgoise. June 2011. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab "Bâtiment pour la Commission européenne à Luxembourg-Kirchberg" [Building for the European Commission in Luxembourg-Kirchberg]. travaux.public.lu (in French). Luxembourg Public Buildings Administration. 8 November 2019. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ a b European Commission (29 April 2009). Memorandum To The Budgetary Authority: Information from the Commission to the budgetary authority, in accordance with Article 179(3) of the Financial Regulation, concerning the conclusion of a tenancy agreement for the Jean Monnet Building and a Memorandum of Understanding relating to the provision of land on the Kirchberg Plateau, Luxembourg, and arrangements for the provision of a new replacement administrative complex (PDF) (Report). European Parliament. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ a b c d Communication from the Commission on Policy for the Accommodation of Commission Services in Brussels and Luxembourg (PDF) (Report). European Commission. 5 September 2007. COM(2007)501. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ European Commission (8 October 2012). Information Note to the Budgetary Authority: Conclusion of a contract between the Luxembourg State and the Commission on the prefinancing, construction, handover and sale of the future JMO2 Building (PDF) (Report). European Parliament. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ a b c "Jean Monnet 2: Bâtiment de la Commission Europeenne a Luxembourg | Concours International d'Architecture 2010 | Conference De Presse 16.12.2010" [Jean Monnet 2: Building of the European Commission in Luxembourg | International Architecture Competition | Press Conference 16.12.2010] (PDF). gouvernement.lu. Luxembourg Government. 16 December 2010. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ Raulot, Nicolas (17 December 2010). "Jean Monnet 2: le verdict est tombé" [Jean Monnet 2: a verdict has been reached]. paperjam.lu (in French). Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ a b c d Hansen, Josée (12 April 2013). "Les trous de l'Europe: Deux giga-chantiers européens au Kirchberg, celui du Parlement et celui de la Commission, pour 850 millions d'euros en tout, stagnent actuellement" [The pits of Europe: Two giant construction works in Kirchberg, that of the Parliament and Commission, costing 850 million euros, are currently stagnating]. Lëtzebuerger Land (in French). Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ a b c Management Plan 2019 (PDF) (Report). Office for Infrastructure and Logistics in Luxembourg, European Commission. 19 December 2018. Ares(2018)6565888. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ "Asbestos found in European commission building". Luxembourg Times. 4 July 2014. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ "Staff from asbestos office relocated by May 2016". Luxembourg Times. 2 December 2015. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ Strategic Plan 2016-2020 (PDF) (Report). Office for Infrastructure and Logistics in Luxembourg, European Commission. 17 March 2016. Ares(2016)1339405. Retrieved 28 January 2020.
- ^ Roberts, Duncan; Coubray, Céline (25 July 2018). "Jean Monnet recycled". Delano. Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ Marques, David (5 June 2018). "Luxembourg : le Jean-Monnet 2 sortira enfin de terre" [Luxembourg : The Jean-Monnet 2 finally rises out of the earth]. Le Quotidien (in French). Retrieved 29 January 2020.
- ^ "Premier coup de pelle du bâtiment Jean Monnet II en présence de Xavier Bettel et François Bausch" [Groundbreaking ceremony for the Jean Monnet II building in the presence of Xavier Bettel and François Bausch] (Press release) (in French). Luxembourg government. 4 June 2018. Retrieved 31 January 2020.
- ^ a b c "€526m Jean Monnet II Building set for 3,600 Staff with 23-floor Tower". Chronicle.lu. 4 June 2018. Retrieved 30 January 2020.
- ^ Danescu, Elena Rodica (7 April 2016). "Luxembourg, permanent capital of the Community institutions". CVCE.EU by UNI.LU. Retrieved 31 January 2020.