Saturday, January 22, 2011

Strata SE1 / BFLS

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Architects: BFLS
Location: ,
Structural/M & E Engineer: WSP Group
Acoustic Consultant: Acoustic Logic Consultancy
Environmental Advisor: URS Corporation Ltd
Construction Advisor: Brookfield Construction UK
Client: Brookfield Europe
Landscape Architect: Townshend Landscape Architects
Wind Engineer: RWDI‐Anemos Ltd
Wind Turbines: Norwin AS
Project Area: 306,000 sqm
Budget: £113.5m
Project Year: 2007-2010
Photographs: Will Pryce, James Brittain, Edmund Sumner,

elevations

Strata SE1 is a 148 metre high 43‐storey residential tower that forms a dynamic new addition to the skyline. The first building in the world with integral wind turbines, it also sets a new benchmark in terms of environmental strategy.

The client’s brief challenged the design team not only to develop a high‐rise residential concept that would kick start the Elephant & Castle regeneration but also to wholly embrace energy efficiency, targeting an EcoHomes assessment rating of “excellent”.

The site was already identified for a tall building by the local authority as part of the Elephant & Castle SPG. The design is very specific to the scheme, its location and addresses considerations at both local and at wider city scale and context.

© James Brittain

With 408 apartments, Strata SE1 will be home to more than 1,000 residents. It offers a mix of market (310) and intermediate housing (98) in the form of shared‐equity affordable dwellings to satisfy direct local housing needs. 20 of the 98 affordable homes are reserved exclusively for residents relocated from the nearby Heygate Estate.

The project team worked closely with client Brookfield and engineers WSP to refine the original scheme in terms of the core in relation to common spaces, with the use of post‐tension slabs further reducing slab thickness, enabling greater floor‐to‐floor heights, and to eventually develop a high‐ performance, three‐layer, aluminium‐and‐glass façade. The façade’s sculpted effect and range of glazing shapes allow a wide variety of views from the light‐filled apartments and help break up Strata’s overall sense of mass.

typical floor plan

Environmentally, the adoption of 200mm thick post‐tensioned concrete floor slabs and high strength blade columns saved over 2000m3 of concrete and 1800 tonnes of CO2. This CO2 reduction is the equivalent of emissions from energy that the apartments will use over four years.

The language created by the façade adds a strong sense of hierarchy to the architectural order of this residential building. Hence, the overall form can enjoy a clearly articulated base, middle and top zone. At the base of the building, outer layers have been peeled back to reveal glazing and create transparency for the retail and entrance to the building. At the top of the building, a similar approach has been taken to reveal a crystalline apex; a top and side‐lit sky lobby provides access to the upper‐level apartments.

© Edmund Sumner

The main entrance looks towards the core regeneration area and the City and is signified by a 37‐ storey slot carved in the northern tip of the tower extending all the way down to ground level. This entrance is prominent and set back from the main pedestrian thoroughfare adjacent to Walworth Road, enhancing the sense of arrival. The double‐height lobby beyond allows for a gradual reduction in scale from outside to inside, further bridging the transition from public to private space.

The central bank of three lifts faces the entrance, providing a clear and unambiguous means of accessing the upper levels and on reaching the residential levels, the lift lobby is at the heart of the building. There are no dark corridors on the residential levels and each flat is accessed via short entrance halls off the main lobby to individual front doors.

structural diagram

The final configuration enlarged and defined a series of linked pedestrian friendly spaces at ground floor level, each with its own unique character, providing much‐needed permeability across the site. The orientation, scale, slenderness, articulation of its top and grain of its distinctive cladding are designed to both make their mark on the skyline as well as create a strong sense of human scale that engages the public when viewed from close‐up.

The sustainability strategy created for Strata SE1 is to reduce the residential development’s total energy consumption through a combination of low energy design, integrated renewable energy generation and future allowances for connection to the planned E&C MUSCo (Multi Utility Services Company) district system, which will provide heat and electricity from Biomass CHP energy centres, grey water to all toilets for all affordable units within Strata SE1 and a connection to the site‐wide fibre network for high speed data access to all residents.

© Edmund Sumner

Various low energy features incorporated into the Strata SE1 include bespoke high performing facade with an air permeability leakage rate that is 50% better than current building regulations; vertical district heating system utilising high efficiency, low NOx boilers; low energy lighting in all landlord areas and 40% of the lighting in each apartment.

In addition, the three nine‐metre‐diameter wind turbines will provide effective on‐site renewable energy generation, which will feed directly into the landlords system and further reduce overall energy consumption to the building. The three turbines are rated at 19kW each and are anticipated to produce at least 50Mega Watt hours of electricity per annum or 8% of Strata SE1’s total estimated total energy consumption.

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The concept of integrating technology was embraced throughout the design and construction stages. The use of sprinklers within all apartments, for example, enabled the omission of the standard fire‐ protected lobbies, creating more attractive, open living spaces. A further advantage was gained by the use of whole house ventilation systems with heat recovery, which reduced the size of radiators, allowing for more flexible space planning and improving the acoustic performance of the apartments, a challenge posed by the dense urban environment in which the building sits.

Finally, 96% of all waste material was also recycled during the construction stage.

Given that this was to be the first major scheme to come forward as part of the wider Elephant & Castle regeneration, the form and expression needed to be bold so that Strata SE1 could be a landmark in its own right, as well as be a catalyst for the ongoing regeneration of the area, which will in time feature a planned cluster of tall buildings.

Products in this project

  • Brassware by Hansgrohe
  • Shower Screens by Majestic Showers

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Neugebauer House / Richard Meier & Partners Architects

Courtesy of ©Scott Frances ESTO

Among many other things, the , which was completed in 1998, stands as a prime example of an architects ability to creatively design within the city codes and regulations while still maintaining the quality and style found in their other buidings.

As a prominent twentieth century architect who fuses main principles of design from his peers and fellow architects with his own, Richard Meier is known for his endless variations of a rather specific theme of white Neo-Corbusian form, mostly using enameled panels and glass. The emphasis on light, color, place, plain geometry and the interaction between all of the latter help Richard Meier & Partners Architects to design architecture that is clear, comprehensible, and easily admirable.

More on the and Richard Meier & Partners Architects after the break.

Courtesy of ©Scott Frances ESTO

Situated in a prestigious residential community on a one-and-a-half acre waterfront site, this house faces southwest over Doubloon Bay. One approaches the wedge-shaped site, which fans out towards the water, from a winding avenue lined with royal palm trees. In forecourt of the house a square grove of twenty-five palms serves as foil to a freestanding cylindrical garage faced in limestone.

West Elevation, Courtesy of

Since the turfed area of the forecourt is reinforced, pedestrians and cars are free to circulate across the greensward at will. Beyond, concealing the water, lies the horizontal facade of the house itself, clad in two by three foot limestone slabs backed by a concrete frame and masonry structure. Pierced at regular intervals by vertical slot windows, the facade conceals a wide, top-lit access corridor running the length of the house.

Courtesy of ©Scott Frances ESTO

The linear organization consists of five parallel layers from front to back: access, service, living, sun terrace, and lap pool. A raised main entry penetrates the limestone wall of the front facade to give onto the corridor. A fifteen-foot module controls the structural bay and the incremental dimensions of all the cellular spaces. The main volumes, including both sleeping and living spaces, are arranged in a linear formation, affording each room an impressive view over the lap pool to the bay beyond.

Section at Bedroom, Courtesy of

The principal rooms and their attendant bathing, dressing. and (in one stance) cooking facilities are covered by a steel-frame butterfly roof cantilevered off paired steel stanchions at 15-foot centers. This roof, finished with a stone-paneled rain screen, satisfies the community requirement for a pitched roof while reinforcing the house’s orientation toward the water.

Courtesy of ©Scott Frances ESTO

This giant canopy/roof running is augmented by clerestory louvers made up of one-inch diameter horizontal aluminum tubes plus a ceramic frit superimposed on the zenithal glazing of the main corridor. The aluminum-frame curtain wall of the oceanfront is made of hurricane-resistant laminated glass.

Special thanks to and Scott Frances ESTO for the images, drawings, data and description of the .

Architect:
Location: ,
Project Year: 1995-1998
Photographs: Courtesy of Richard Meier & Partners Architects © Scott Frances ESTO
References: Richard Meier & Partners Architects

Friday, January 14, 2011

North Beach / Heliotrope Architects

© Helicam Asia Aerial Photography

Design team: Original Vision Ltd
Project architects: Adrian McCarroll, Waiman Cheung, Jamie Jamieson
Location: Kamala beach, ,
Project area: 2,644 sqm, 800 sqm of internal area
Project year: 2008
Photographs: Marc Gerritsen. Helicam Asia Aerial Photography

© Helicam Asia Aerial Photography

Nestled in a cascading, west facing ravine with a dramatic slab of rock defining the northern edge and a stunning outlook over the azure blue of the Andaman Sea to the south, our commission; to do this demanding but ultimately spectacular site justice, was both daunting and exciting.

The defining elements are the rock and the view. They dominate at every juncture. They resonate on first approach, through the migration from public to private space, in the living and in the family areas, in the gardens, in the bedrooms; and they continue to command respect down the tropical jungle steps that arrive at a secluded rock platform, flanked by the same seam that welcomed you 60m above. Constant reference to these elements instills a feeling of solidity that contrasts with the openness of the house, reinforcing the dynamism and vibrancy that pays homage to the magic of the location.

sketch

The home grows out from the rock; the bedroom element rests between it and the wing that strikes the perpendicular, rising vertically from the slope. This composition defines the open living and dining space that is simply a transition between two garden areas. It is intimate but open and the uninterrupted clear span creates a bridge under which the conventions defining indoor space disappear.

Cantilevered over a massage sala, the swimming pool completes the composition. It is the focal point that draws the eye to the view and instills a calmness that provides balance with the energy of the architecture.

© Helicam Asia Aerial Photography

Allocation of Living Space

The provision and allocation of living space in the house is carefully distributed over the three main levels of accommodation.

At the main entrance or Entertainment Level, the principal open living and dining space forms the core of the entertainment function. The terraces, swimming pool, dining sala and barbeque area all refer and rely on this main space and together, complete the composition. Supporting this function are the kitchen, storage, laundry and staff areas.

© Helicam Asia Aerial Photography

Above the Entertainment Level is the main family Bedroom Level. The master suite is accompanied by a further three bedrooms, all of which, including their bathrooms, command uninterrupted ocean views.

Sliding doors can be opened front and back to encourage the monsoon breezes to cool the rooms.

Below the Entertainment Level, two further bedrooms, a private spa and a large games and family room complete the home on the Guest and Spa Level.

© Helicam Asia Aerial Photography

© Helicam Asia Aerial Photography

It is from this level that access is gained to the steps leading to the rock pools and the ocean.

Planning Restrictions

The principal planning restrictions on the west coast of are a series of set-back zones from the Mean High Water Line (MHWL). These zones control density, site coverage and height limits.

Located within the 3rd of these zones, a band that has been designed to allow low density and low visual impact development, Villa Amanzi is well within limits and therefore enjoys generous green space around it.