A Subtle Insertion within a Lush Grid
Monadnock Architects unveils Volante, a social housing building which occupies a slender footprint within the Nieuw-Zuid redevelopment in the Dutch city of Hilversum. Here, porch flats and generous greenery shape a legacy of postwar urban planning. On a site previously occupied by a residential-care facility, this new social housing project completes an ensemble of five structures, introducing density while honoring the open qualities of the neighborhood. The structure’s position atop a parking garage required precision in planning, resulting in a carefully calibrated relationship between height, massing, and light.
Volante is designed as two joined volumes, aligned lengthwise to nestle between existing buildings while preserving access to daylight and sightlines. At the center, a circular atrium provides orientation and light, anchoring the corridors that lead to each unit. Though compact, the apartments benefit from this shared interior rhythm, with circulation treated as an architectural space rather than a means to an end.
images © Stijn Bollaert
playful geometries mark volante’s entrance
With the design of its Volante project, Monadnock Architects takes a pragmatic yet expressive approach to facade design. Long elevations are animated by a steady cadence of vertical piers and horizontal bands, realized in brickwork that feels both familiar and carefully wrought. Rather than apply decorative treatments, the architects embedded richness into the construction itself. Shaped bricks form junctions with a quiet attention to detail, creating shadows and texture that reward close observation.
The main entrance distinguishes itself through a palette of glazed bricks in deep, contrasting tones. Openings shift in scale and shape, inviting movement through a slightly abstracted gateway. This deliberate formal variation signals a break from the repetitive housing block, asserting the address as a shared front door and a marker of arrival within the neighborhood’s internal rhythm.
Volante is part of a densification effort in the Dutch city of Hilversum
Monadnock Architects’ Optimistic Details
Monadnock Architects use the terminal walls of Volante to define its urban role beyond the immediate site. These gable-like end facades are more than closures — they operate as signals, visible from afar, and carry a subtle figuration that punctuates the building’s linear volume. In a district that balances visual openness with increasing density, these gestures give character without demanding attention.
There’s a distinct clarity to Volante’s expression that reflects a belief in the dignity of housing. Materials are robust, but their assembly conveys levity. The ochres and reds of the brickwork catch changing light with warmth, while the building’s quiet symmetry offers a sense of order amid the trees and neighboring facades. It is a structure that looks settled, yet quietly ambitious.
The architecture resists the urge to impose a singular identity. Instead, its strength lies in how fluently it completes a larger composition. Densification here does not compete with the inherited character of Hilversum’s greenery or mid-century fabric. The building draws on these cues, integrating new residents into a context with care and continuity.
the main entrance is marked by glazed bricks and geometric openings that establish identity
the brick facade features vertical piers and horizontal bands that create depth and rhythm
end facades are designed as urban markers visible from a distance