KWK Promes developed for the Gambit offices in Gliwice, Poland, a company specializing in pipe distribution, an office building that also served as a warehouse and product showcase. This is a sturdy and attractive example that communicates the company's quality and essence.

On a rectangular site that previously housed a production facility and is surrounded by traditional housing, the project adapts volumetrically and geometrically to its surroundings. It is configured as a volume that meets the local urban planning height limit requirements and features an elongated silhouette with a sloping roof, avoiding fragmentation of the context, respecting and integrating it into it.

KWK Promes developed a strictly industrial office building for the Gambit Offices. Its facade is made of aluminum sheets and pipes, durable and long-lasting materials that facilitate building maintenance while giving it a unique appearance that reflects the company's aesthetic and philosophy.

The project's interiors are illuminated by windows and skylights that connect the regularly designed ground-floor offices with the other rooms and the exterior, creating a flexible space along the exterior walls that fosters comfort and maintains the project's essence, communicates the company's activities, and addresses the need for low maintenance.

Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski.

Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski.

Project description by KWK Promes

Gambit, a specialist pipe distribution company, commissioned us to design an office-warehouse building that would serve as its unique showcase. Yet we were asked to do it at the lowest possible cost.

So we came up with the idea of using the material they trade in, which they could also acquire at cost. At the same time, we wanted the office and warehouse sections to form a unified whole. As a result, we designed the building to look like a stack of pipes, immediately communicating what the company does.

A rectangular production hall once stood on this site, but the immediate surroundings consist of residential houses with steep roofs, often accompanied by long, cubic outbuildings. This inspired the final form of the building.

Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski.
Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski.

The three main functions of the building—a warehouse, a workshop for preparing orders, and an office area—are reflected in its form. A two-storey section with sloping walls houses the offices, a lower section serves as the workshop, and the higher cuboid is an unheated warehouse.

The way the pipes were laid out determined the pitch of the roof. The angled layout of the pipes creates the only possible inclination angle, which defines the shape of this part of the building.The office section with the sloping roof was trimmed at the second floor level to stay within the height limit set by the local zoning plan, and the additional volume would have been unnecessary.

The office section with the sloping roof was trimmed at the second floor to comply with the local zoning height limit, and to avoid generating unnecessary volume.

Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski.
Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski.

The Gambit building forms a frontage from the street, while, when viewed from the residential district, its fragmented volume blends into the dispersed context.

The façade was ultimately not made from Gambit pipes—designed for underground use—as we found that they oxidised under UV light and did not meet fire safety requirements. Instead, we reached for inexpensive, raw aluminium sheeting, which was not only cheaper but also proven in our previous projects such as the OUTrial House, Unikato, and Konieczny's Ark. This material develops a patina over time, taking on a matte, raw character reminiscent of concrete. Importantly, the sheet is incredibly durable and virtually indestructible, making it easy to maintain. This is crucial for us because the operation of buildings generates up to 30% of CO₂ emissions, so we always seek simple, low-maintenance solutions.

The pipes at the edges of the building have been capped to prevent them from whistling in the wind. Although the investors initially feared that the building might become a shelter for various animals, we ultimately decided against installing bird nets. The protection had been planned in the design, but the more we thought about it, the more we leaned towards the idea that it would be beneficial if birds liked the building and it gained an additional function. We began to convince the investors—and in the end, we succeeded, although we are not sure whether it was the ecological or financial arguments that convinced them, as skipping the nets significantly reduced investment costs.

Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski
Gambit Office by KWK Promes. Photograph by Juliusz Sokołowski.

The interiors are well-lit by traditional windows and skylights. In the office spaces on the ground floor, designed for regular occupancy, employees have classic glazing with a view of a small garden carved out of the parking area. The storage area and auxiliary rooms on the upper floor, which require flexible space along the external walls, are illuminated by skylights.

The building serves a strictly industrial function and is primarily surrounded by parking for cars and trucks. Therefore, on the roof of the lowest part, we have designed a relaxation terrace for the employees.

More information

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Architects
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KWK Promes. Lead architects.- Robert Konieczny, Michał Lisiński.

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Project team
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Architects.- Katarzyna Pająk, Karol Jackiewicz, Karol Knap, Krzysztof Kobiela.

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Collaborators
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Landscape design.- Robert Konieczny KWK Promes.
Investor.- Gambit Systems.

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Builder
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Firma Inżynierska STATYK.

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Area
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Site area.- 3043,81 sqm.
Gross covered area.- 714,84 sqm.
Usable floor area.- 943,42 sqm.
Total surface area.- 1285, 21 sqm.
Storage hall.- 751 sqm.
Hall with social spaces.- 156,4 sqm.
Office spaces.- 377,81 sqm.

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Dates
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Design.- 2013.
Realisation.- 2024.

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Location
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Bojkowska 120, Gliwice, Poland. 

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Photography
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Robert Konieczny. An architect, graduate of Architecture at Silesian University of Technology in Gliwice. In 1996 he received the certificate of New Jersey Institute of Technology. A leader and a founder of KWK Promes architecture studio established in 1999. In 2012 he became an independent expert for the Mies van der Rohe Foundation. Konieczny was a nominate of the European Award of Mies van der Rohe Foundation eight times. Moreover he is a holder of the prestigious award for the House of the Year 2006, winning with the Aatrial House as the best housing project in a competition organized by World Architecture News.

In 2007 the KWK Promes office was listed among 44 best young architects of the world published by 'Scalae'. Same year the 'Wallpaper' magazine issued Konieczny's practice as one of the 101 most exciting architecture studios in the world. Year 2008 brought him another prize of The European Center for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies and The Chicago Athenaeum 'European 40 under 40'.
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Published on: April 14, 2025
Cite: "Material as reference. Gambit Office by KWK Promes" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/material-reference-gambit-office-kwk-promes> ISSN 1139-6415
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