OBA library in the evening
OBA Next Lab

Designed as a library, workshop, café, platform, and pop-up stage all at once, the building features a multifunctional program that serves the wider Amsterdam Zuidoost area. Commissioned by OBA (Amsterdam’s Public Library), this project is a dynamic social infrastructure designed to evolve with its community over a planned seven-year lifespan, after which it will be dismantled and relocated.

A magnet for the community 
The project confronts multiple challenges: engaging a digitally native, culturally diverse generation, and creating architecture that is simultaneously temporary, circular, and embraced by the neighbourhood. By introducing a central "living room" featuring a light-filled atrium and a sculptural sitting landscape, the building becomes a natural magnet for anyone wanting to meet, learn, or simply connect.
Central atrium with multifunctional object
Robotica room
Client: OBA (Public library Amsterdam) and TUMO
Project:  Oba next lab Kraaiennest 
Location: Amsterdam, Netherlands
Program: Library, Cinema, Bar/Cafe.
Size: 1.175 m2
Status:  Completed 2026
Architect: Matter Makers / A-W-R / BAZ_studio.
Partners: IMD (structure), Vink Bouw (contractor), Atelier Bouwkunde (engineering), Laureco (advisor building physics). 
Pictures: Riccardo de Vecchi (all except top), Melchior Overdevest (top)
The pink sitting hill 
Organised around spatial and social openness, the building connects seamlessly with its surroundings. The central "learning hill" acts as both seating and placemaking, beginning inside and flowing outward into the public square to blur the boundary between the city and the interior. Located next to the busy Kraaiennest metro station, the building provides a bright, welcoming anchor for the area.

Reprogrammable by design 
The large, pavilion-like glass atrium faces the public square. During the day, it invites visitors to play, read in a hidden corner, or participate in workshops. In minutes, a single giant curtain and hidden retractable roller blinds can reprogram the space, transforming it into a cinema or live music venue. Inside, the design rejects formal reading rooms and silent zones in favour of informality.
Learning room with retractable wall
The learning hill with hidden reading nooks
Reflecting a generational shift in how knowledge is shared, the space supports a broad range of cultural activities: coding, music production, robotica, makerspace, group work, performances, and casual socialising. Other spaces can be reconfigured with retractable walls and movable furniture to adapt to the needs of the day, with all cabling routed through central ceiling canals to ensure maximum flexibility.

The future is wood
In a district dominated by concrete and hard surfaces, this wooden structure stands out as a refreshing contrast, representing a future where community development and learning go hand in hand. Despite its temporary location, the building is a robust, environmentally conscious structure engineered entirely from dry-fit, prefabricated timber panels on Stelcon slabs, avoiding poured concrete, glue, and welding altogether. This approach ensures every component can be seamlessly dismantled and reused without damage, while flat-pack logistics, single-truck timber delivery, and repurposed photovoltaic cells keep its carbon footprint to an absolute minimum.



OBA next lab with makerspace facing the square
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