Designer Dan Vakhrameyev has created a glossy, multifunctional inside for an plane hangar crammed with industrial design particulars for skydiving collective Aerotim in Ukraine.
Vakhrameyev, who’s co-founder of the Pluskouple design studio, designed the inside of the commercial hangar for Timur Fatkullin’s Aerotim collective.
Positioned in an undisclosed location, it was supposed to operate each as a upkeep area for the aeroplanes and a spot the place the crew may hang around.
The skin of the hangar has an industrial-style full-width gate coated with uncooked zinc sheets. At its high, a polycarbonate part permits mild throughout the day.

Contained in the 400-square-metre hangar, the designer wished to maintain the identical pared-back, industrial really feel.
“The general design language stays intentionally restrained, counting on uncovered surfaces, trustworthy supplies, and exact detailing to create a mature, disciplined surroundings suited to pre- and post-flight routines,” Vakhrameyev mentioned.

The bottom flooring centres round a full-height hangar corridor designed to accommodate mild plane, with partitions constituted of cement-bonded particle board (CBPB).
To proceed the give attention to uncooked supplies, Vakhrameyev mounted the panels with seen joints derived from plane fuselage rivet-fastening methods.

Tables, doorways and cabinets all through the inside had been additionally constituted of CBPB, which was stored in its pure gray hue.
“The general color scheme was dictated by the uncovered surfaces of the constructing supplies we use,” the designer informed Dezeen. “The purpose was to create a mature, disciplined surroundings with trustworthy, uncooked supplies.”

How battle has made Ukrainian interiors “bolder and extra attention-grabbing”
Vakhrameyev designed Aerotim’s Crew Station on a mezzanine flooring, from which it overlooks the hangar by means of a floor-to-ceiling glass wall.
Right here, crew members share a kitchen, workplace area, a leisure space and sleeping area, in addition to a altering room with showers.

The employees areas function wood kitchen cupboards to convey extra heat to the commercial inside, with wood furnishings and textile partitions additionally added to the sleeping areas.
These areas have spot lighting, whereas the primary hangar options linear LED lighting mounted in a structural grid. Vakhrameyev additionally created a lighting design constituted of aluminium offcuts for the primary assembly space.

Aluminium was additionally used for the benches and rails within the crew’s bathe and altering room, whereas stainless-steel bathe components nod to the zinc gate of the hangar itself.
The flooring of the hangar had been designed to be sturdy and hardwearing, needed in an surroundings that can expertise heavy use.
“A seamless polymer flooring is utilized in the primary hangar space, whereas a sturdy vinyl floor is used on the second stage to facilitate simple upkeep,” Vakhrameyev mentioned.

In a latest article, Ukrainian designers informed Dezeen design editor Jennifer Hahn how the continuing battle with Russia has made the nation’s interiors “bolder and extra attention-grabbing”.
Not too long ago, Ukrainian studio Aranchii Architects unveiled designs for a church with a group air-raid shelter.
The images is by Andriy Bezuglov.










