Kinzo Designs Stunning MOL Group Headquarters in Budapest

Kinzos recently completed MOL Campus project in Budapest demonstrates how interior design can initiate and advance transformation in the working world. As general planners, the architects were responsible for the interior design of the new MOL Group headquarters. Designed by Foster and Partners of London, the office complex is Hungary’s tallest building and Budapests new landmark. 

The MOL campus impresses with its multi-story atrium and futuristic architecture. Photos by HG Esch.

Change as opportunity — right from the start 

The project kicked off with a survey that was designed to identify the needs and wishes of MOL Group employees. This participatory approach is essential, Kinzo believes, if a conventionally organized company is to modernize successfully just as indispensable as an adaptable, diverse interior design. Underlying this is Kinzos self-understanding as a manager of change, bringing together project consulting, design and implementation in one single process.

Detailed view of the high-rise glass facade with a view of modern work areas and a centrally installed spiral staircase.

Designed for the future

The MOL Campus comprises around 3,600 workplaces on a total area of 43,000 square meters, spread over 28 floors. With its long-term strategy2030+, the MOL Group has set itself the goal of achieving climate neutrality by 2050. In 2017, Kinzo prevailed against numerous international competitors with its concept of initiating and promoting this cultural change by creating an agile working environment for the energy company.

The design concept promotes an open and collaborative work environment.

Reflection of corporate culture and a home for employees

The MOL Campus, comprising a high-rise building and an associated five-story podium building, is prominently located directly on the Danube. An outstanding feature of the dynamic-organic architecture are the atriums. In the low-rise building, the atrium extends over the entire height of the building, while in the high-rise building, they connect three floors, creating generous air spaces.

Kinzos priority was to design this open, transparent architecture in line with the needs of the company and its employees with places for community and social interaction, but also with spaces for retreat and concentration. Their guiding principle was to recreate the qualities of urban life.

Every city has special places that people identify with, use and appropriate, and the world of work should be no different not generic and interchangeable, but a reflection of the company culture and a place where the teams feel at home. This allows individuals to experience themselves as a community and part of the collective.

The MOL Campus gives employees the opportunity to choose their preferred environment for working and interacting with their colleagues throughout the day. At the same time, it was crucial for Kinzo to make the interiors of the MOL Campus changeable and adaptive, because an office is only fit for the future if it can react to changing team sizes, tasks and forms of work.

A central design element is the lush greenery, which is present throughout the building.

Microarchitectures within the architecture

In its role as general planners, Kinzo had overall responsibility for the workplace strategy as well as the conception and planning of the interior architecture of the MOL Campus. Cooperation partners were M.O.O.CON from Vienna for employee participation, the lighting design office Licht Kunst Licht and the local partner MinusPlus Architects from Budapest.

Central elements of the design concept are the lush greenery and so-called microarchitectures. The planting runs through the building like a green ribbon, from the exterior to the atriums and upwards through the floors. In individual areas, the greenery is so dense it creates veritable green spaces. Kinzo also designed microarchitectures to structure the wide, open spaces of the office floors and to create functional places for meetings, kitchens and checkrooms. They expand into space along the facades, like crystal soap bubbles. Inside the floors, they rest like boulders between the different workstations, their crystalline shape creating contrasts with the buildings organic architecture. The use of color also plays an important role in the project: Strong tones in partly stark contrasts enliven the interior and offer employees moments of visual identification because Kinzo placed people at the heart of the design, both in the color scheme and in the overall interior design.

Kinzo is an internationally active architecture and interior design firm with a focus on Building in Existing Contexts, New Work and Placemaking that was founded in Berlin in 2005. Under the direction of Karim El-Ishmawi and Chris Middleton, as well as supporting co-founder Martin Jacobs, the interdisciplinary teams in Berlin and Munich accompany projects from consulting and analysis to strategy and conception, as well as planning and implementation. They create forward-looking conversion concepts to revitalise spaces and repurpose them according to needs. The perspective of the future users is at the centre of every planning. With this holistic and participatory design approach, Kinzo conceives new living and working environments as distinctive places that sustainably attract and inspire people.

The MOL campus in Budapest offers a working world inspired by urban life — with places of community and exchange, but also with spaces for retreat and concentration.
The central spiral staircase in the building connects the open and private office floors.