{"id":9174,"date":"2026-05-31T10:00:01","date_gmt":"2026-05-31T10:00:01","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.angesfinanciers.org\/?p=9174"},"modified":"2026-06-05T15:24:50","modified_gmt":"2026-06-05T15:24:50","slug":"sweeping-roofs-top-bright-red-logistics-hub-in-ukraine-by-aranchii-architects","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.angesfinanciers.org\/index.php\/2026\/05\/31\/sweeping-roofs-top-bright-red-logistics-hub-in-ukraine-by-aranchii-architects\/","title":{"rendered":"Sweeping roofs top bright red logistics hub in Ukraine by Aranchii Architects"},"content":{"rendered":"
\"Prostir<\/div>\n

Metal<\/a> panels with a bright red<\/a> finish cloak the warehouse-like forms at Prostir Business Hub in Ukraine<\/a>, completed by local studio Aranchii Architects<\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n

Located in the village of Zymna Voda on the outskirts of Lviv, the 12,000-square-metre logistics hub provides commercial, office and storage spaces\u00a0for business real estate company Alterra Group<\/a> across a trio of buildings with curved gable roofs.<\/p>\n

\"Logistics
Sweeping red roofs top Prostir Business Hub<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

Focusing on flexibility and modularity, Aranchii Architects<\/a> designed three separate volumes \u2013 one smaller and two larger \u2013 with steel roofs supported by grids of concrete columns that allow them to be easily subdivided and reconfigured.<\/p>\n

These warehouse-like buildings were cloaked entirely in metal panels with a bold finish informed by the Falun red – a pigment named after the Falun Mine in Sweden, traditionally used on Scandinavian barns.<\/p>\n

\"Prostir
The logistics hub was created by Aranchii Architects<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

“While some of our other projects in the country were suffering damage from attacks, the challenge here was to maintain high architectural quality within the constraints of a wartime budget and logistics,” chief architect Dmytro Aranchii told Dezeen.<\/p>\n

“The choice of the deep Falun red colour was intentional: it creates a bold dialogue with the natural greenery and acts as a landmark of stability,” he added.<\/p>\n

“It echoes the traditional geometry of private gabled houses, grounding a massive 12,000-square-metre complex in a landscape that is both pastoral and strategically vital.”<\/p>\n

\"Logistics
Its exterior mimics the Falun red pigment<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

To create different scales of internal space, the form of each warehouse was subdivided, with a single asymmetric gable roof at one end splitting into three separate gables in the larger volumes and two in the smaller volume.<\/p>\n

According to Aranchii, this subtle transition via curved roof ridges was intended to combine a more “human scale” frontage facing the road and a more typical industrial scale at the back of the site.<\/p>\n