Project Credits & Specs
- Architecture: JSWD
- Photography: Taufik Kenan, Franco Casaccia / JSWD, Christa Lachenmaier, Schmitz.Reichard GmbH
- Location: Brühl, Germany
- GFA: 5,200 m2
- Year: 2023
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- Structural Design: Kempen Krause Ingenieure Aachen
- Building Service Engineering: DEERNS
- Library and Interior Planning: UKW Innenarchitekten, Krefeld
- Landscape: RMPSL, Bonn
- Site: 4,800 m2
- Client: City of Brühl

Project Description
The objective of the competition was to plan an extension for the existing town hall and to create a concept for the adjacent Janshof square. The project involved replacing an extension that was built in the 1960s.
One particular challenge was connecting the new building to the historic town hall, and then renovating it in line with heritage requirements. The result is an accessible, future-oriented town hall that meets the latest energy standards, designed to enable flexible use and to tap into synergies by connecting various building functions.


The offices of the municipal authorities are located above the civil registry offices (Bürgeramt and Standesamt). The municipal library is spread across all floors of the new building, with a children’s library in the basement that opens up to a reading courtyard. Clear signage makes the town hall easy to navigate. The new foyer opens up to both the pedestrian zone and the now largely car-free Janshof. From here, visitors’ paths converge with those of pedestrians entering the historic building via Markt.




The new building plays with the idea of different urban spaces and proportions in Brühl’s historic city center. The front building references the form of the historic town hall, creating a cubature that is at once unique and typical of the region. The three interlocking structures are oriented so that their gables face the adjacent street, with brickwork partially perforated so that it filters the light coming into the underlying windows. The same light-colored bricks are used for the facade and the roof, thus reinforcing the cubic effect of the new building.


The project aims for the greatest possible sustainability. For example, the firm preserved as much of the historic building’s fabric as possible. Energy and heat are supplied by a combined heat and power plant. In addition to triple-glazed windows, a great deal of natural light, and external solar protection, concrete component activation guarantees lower energy consumption.





The project description is provided by the architects via v2com.
About the Architects

JSWD is a Cologne-based architecture firm founded in 2000, with additional offices in Berlin and Tampa. Led by a diverse team of partners, the firm employs around 240 professionals from over 30 countries. JSWD has completed more than 60 architectural projects across Germany and Europe, ranging from cultural venues and residential buildings to healthcare facilities and adaptive reuse developments. As both architects and urban planners, JSWD prioritizes sustainable design, material excellence, and project responsibility—from concept to final handover. Collaboration with international architecture firms enhances their creative and technical perspectives. Their design philosophy centers on conceptual clarity, using minimal yet well-defined elements to create distinctive structural and spatial compositions that reflect users’ identities through corporate architecture.


























