Sampling transforms industrial. A brief context to set expectations.
Sampling transforms industrial: Quick notes
Colourful metalwork contrasts with the worn bricks of this former industrial courtyard in Riga, Latvia, which has been converted into a residential complex by local studio Sampling.
Named Augustine’s Garden, the cluster of low-rise industrial buildings sits off a main street behind an Art Nouveau apartment block with a white plaster facade, which was also renovated by Sampling as part of the scheme.
Sampling has completed a housing complex on a former industrial courtyard in Riga
Despite the existing industrial buildings not being heritage protected or deemed historically significant, the studio decided to alter them as little as possible, contrasting their worn brickwork with colourful metal accents.
“We are deeply interested in advancing the paradigm of adaptive reuse and in working with existing built heritage, regardless of its aesthetic or historical value,” said Sampling founders Liene Jakobsone and Manten Devriendt.
It sits behind an Art Nouveau apartment block
“Care and repair lie at the heart of the project. The ambition was to introduce as little new material as possible, allowing the site itself to determine the material strategy,” they told Dezeen.
“Our challenge was to demonstrate that even materials burdened with negative connotations, such as white silicate brick, can be reevaluated and reactivated through careful and sensitive architectural intervention.”
Green, blue and red-painted metalwork contrasts with the brickwork
The organisation of the apartments at Augustine’s Garden was guided by the site’s existing layout. A mixture of apartments with private entrances sits directly off the courtyard, while smaller duplex studios and upper-floor units are accessed via a shared staircase.
Its external courtyard is equally shared between all residents and has been divided into a series of planted bays around which a paved path winds.
The colours are similarly used across the interiors
“The outdoor space is shared, and there is no fencing around the terraces. Nevertheless, they feel remarkably private,” Jakobsone and Devriendt explained.
“This balance is one of the qualities most appreciated by the residents, living within a small, intimate community while at the same time being located in the centre of a large city,” they added.

Industrial port informs metal exterior of home in Perth by Philip Stejskal
The windows of the apartments are framed in a pastel green-toned aluminium matched by the courtyard furniture, while their brick openings have been reinforced with blue-painted steel lintels.
Red-painted metal canopies shelter the courtyard apartment entrances and a deeper shade of red was used to finish both the courtyard’s hanging light fittings and metalwork around the trees.
The organisation of the apartments was guided by the site’s existing layout
These three colours have been carried through to the interiors of the homes, where they have been used in curtains, carpentry and furniture.
On the street frontage, a pastel green gate sits alongside red sills and a red-metal roof added to the existing apartment block’s frontage, which had its white plasterwork restored and was newly insulated internally.
Some apartments lead directly to the courtyard
Sampling was founded by Jakobsone and Devriendt in 2010, with offices in both Riga and Ghent.
Other recent residential projects in Latvia include a home on the western coast with a twisting slate roof by Made and a barn-like home in Riga with a corrugated metal roof by Gaiss.
The photography is by Madara Kuplā.
Sampling transforms industrial comes up here to connect ideas for clarity.
We reference Sampling transforms industrial briefly to keep the thread coherent.













Also — Nice take on “Sampling transforms industrial site into” — I’ll try that soon. Love this!