In Amsterdam, an architect couple turned a historic building into the site of their firm’s offices—and added their own residence on top.
Welcome to How They Pulled It Off, where we take a close look at one particularly challenging aspect of a home design and get the nitty-gritty details about how it became a reality.
Sometimes the right project chooses you. Such was the case for couple Steven Delva of Delva Landscape Architecture and Stefan Bennebroek of Puur Plus Architects and the historic brewery building in Amsterdam that they now call their home—and office. What began as a tour of one floor of a building to convert into an apartment quickly turned into a moment to envision a much larger project. They discovered that there had once been plans for a modern addition on the top of the building and decided to meet the owner to discuss buying the roof rights. "He said, because it feels really comfortable, I feel really good, and there’s a very good connection, you should buy the whole building," Bennebroek says. They decided to build out office spaces for their respective practices in the existing building, then add a home on top of the structure.

Vines were added up the side of the building. These naturally help cool down the building and on an aesthetic level, serve as a winding green beacon catching eyes at street level. For industrial buildings that aren’t often all that welcoming and are more or less categorically disconnected from nature, these interventions go a long way.
Photo: Yves Drieghe
From there came the challenge of creating a comfortable home addition, while redesigning the building’s lower levels as contemporary office space without disregarding the building’s past. Even though they didn’t intend to mimic the original brick structure’s architecture, they wanted to ensure that both the new addition and the existing building could exist in harmony.
How they pulled it off: A modern home atop a historic building
- Feel it out in person: "The whole space was like a playground for us," Bennebroek explains. There was no distinction between what he and Delva worked on; the two approached the whole process collaboratively. This collaboration was partially enabled by the fact that they worked on the initial designs in person at the site, figuring out what they wanted the new addition to look like intuitively from the rooftop itself. "We designed the window divisions on-site with wooden slats to figure out what the proportions should be," Bennebroek says. Things changed during the process—one of the challenges was knowing when to say when on adjustments—but eventually plans clicked into place. What resulted is a two-level loft-like living space with massive windows that fill the double-height living space with oodles of light.

The space is now filled with light, thanks to double-height windows, allowing for plants and greenery to thrive.
Photo: Yves Drieghe
- Bring nature in: With so much light, there are far fewer limitations to the greenery that can be cultivated inside. Delva is a landscape architect, so plants proved particularly important to the home’s design. Not one but two trees were brought into the space by crane: a 21-foot-tall Japanese Acer for the terrace that anchors one side of the addition, and another smaller tree improbably located inside of the primary bathroom. "It’s such a beautiful interaction between the seasons, which are actually brought into your living area," Bennebroek says.

A view onto the terrace.
Photo: Yves Drieghe
See the full story on Dwell.com: How They Pulled It Off: Converting an Old Brewery Into Their Own Live/Work Haven
Related stories:
- How They Pulled It Off: A 107-Square-Foot Parisian Studio Inspired by Midcentury Ships
- How They Pulled It Off: A Secret Jungle Playroom—That You Enter Through a Hidden Console Door
- How They Pulled It Off: A One-Bedroom Penthouse That Transforms Into a Four-Bedroom Apartment
Read More
By: Rachel Davies
Title: How They Pulled It Off: Converting an Old Brewery Into Their Own Live/Work Haven
Sourced From: www.dwell.com/article/steven-delva-stefan-bennebroek-brewery-live-work-93784898
Published Date: Tue, 25 Nov 2025 13:10:10 GMT
Did you miss our previous article...
https://trendinginbusiness.business/real-estate/the-internets-favorite-transformer-table-is-truly-a-great-hack-for-smallspace-hosting