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Showing posts with label Office. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Office. Show all posts

COSTA MAR OFFICES BY RICARDO BOFILL TALLER DE ARQUITECTURA



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RBTA design for this iconic office building in San Isidro, Lima’s business district expresses and encourages the dynamic activity of the area.


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The gate-shape of this corner building is emphasized by a vertical “scar” on the glazed main façade.


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The scheme provides 15,000 sqm of flexible efficient office space over 18 floors and 10,000 sqm underground car park to accommodate 301 cars over 9 floors.
 
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The double height entrance lobby includes a small business centre, a shop and direct access to the car park.


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Floors from 2 to 13 provide flexible space free of internal columns that allows subdivision into four offices of approximately 250 sqm. The load transfer at floor 14, allows the distribution into two large units.


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We have reserved a special distribution for floor 15 to accommodate a cafeteria with a large lounge terrace offering panoramic views of the city of Lima, board meeting rooms and reception area.


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Alternatively board meetings could be replaced by a fitness club. Top floors can accommodate one of two offices.


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The serigraphed glass façade permits maximum natural daylight penetration thus reducing energy consumption. The scheme, designed to be highly energy efficient, targets LEED Core & Shell label.


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Location: Lima, Peru


Total area: 25,000 sqm

Year: 2013
Client: Lider Inversiones y Proyectos S.A.

GRIDIRON BY DAVID CHIPPERFIELD



01-Gridiron-by-David-Chipperfield


Gridiron, One Pancras Square, is an island building overlooking Battle Bridge Place, King’s Boulevard and Pancras Square in London. Designed by David Chipperfield Architects and set for completion in the first half of 2014.


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This Grade A island office building has a prime spot at the gateway to the King’s Cross development. Connections here are unrivalled and the new underground entrance is in the building itself.


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The reception can be accessed from either King’s Boulevard, a tree-lined, bustling, pedestrian friendly ‘high street’ or from the tranquility of Pancras Square. A double-height colonnade surrounds the building. Distinctive and elegant pendants light the way.


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On the north-east corner of Gridiron, within the colonnade, there are escalators leading down to the London Underground network – so, no need to risk the weather going to and from work. In addition there is 4,000 sq ft of ground floor retail.


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The double height, double entrance reception takes its cue from the outside – Italian ‘Grigio Carnico’ black marble walls, feature lighting and precast concrete floors. Collectively, they set the tone for a space that is both cool and serene. An unhurried welcome awaits staff and clients alike.


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And going up, three 13 person passenger lifts finished in blackened stainless steel take you to any one of the upper floors. Typically each floor measures 7,050 sq ft, and has a south facing 600 sq ft covered balcony.

URBAN MOUNTAIN BY SCHMIDT HAMMER LASSEN ARCHITECTS



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URBAN MOUNTAIN is a proposal for a refurbishment and extension of a 50,000-square-metre high-rise office building in central Oslo.


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The project introduces completely new and innovative ways of reducing energy consumption and the building’s CO2 footprint, employing Cradle to Cradle principles and targeting a BREEAM Outstanding certification.


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When the refurbishment is complete the building will reach a total size of 79,000 square metres and will be a sustainable landmark for the city of Oslo. The building will be the tallest in Norway and the first high-rise building in Norway to enjoy natural ventilation.


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Based on principles from Cradle to Cradle (C2C) thinking, as much as 90% of the demolished existing materials are being recycled into new and upgraded building materials; 80% directly used in the new refurbished building.


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As an example, all the façade elements from the existing building are being re-used in the new façade design. Furthermore, the design concept operates with measurable C2C goals in areas of flexibility, biodiversity and recycling of water, heat and organic waste.


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An important part of this project is to allow the sustainable measures to be visible to the users and the city, hereby raising awareness of how the building works. For instance the façade is characterized by a series of ‘green lungs’.


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The ‘green lungs’ are an innovative part of the natural air intake in the building. With the use of regionally found plants, the ‘green lungs’ contribute to enhance biodiversity locally and to create a better and healthier indoor climate. The green plants clean, humidify and reduce the CO2-concentration of the incoming air for the comfort of the staff and visitors.


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Solar chimneys run from the bottom to the top of the building. A greenhouse on the rooftop captures and reuses the excess heat of the building and the solar heat gain of the solar chimneys. The result is a recognizable building design – a sustainable landmark in the urban setting of the Oslo skyline.


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Another example of visible sustainable solutions in the building is the innovative ice storage, which can be viewed through a large window by people going to and from the metro station. The more than 1000 cubic metres ice storage is used as a heat source in an adapted heat pump design and as a source of direct cooling during the summer.


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To integrate the office building into the local community at street level, public access is given through an Urban Green Mall, selling healthy quality food and locally produced products. Here, people will meet and interact in the large atria, on terraces, in cafés and restaurants.



Location: Oslo, Norway

Architect: Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects

Design Team: Schmidt Hammer Lassen Architects, LOOP Architects, COWI Denmark, COWI Norway, Transsolar Energietechnik GmbH, Vugge til Vugge Denmark

Area Existing: 50,875 m2

Area Extension: 28,375 m2

Client: Entra Eiendom AS
Competition: 1st prize in open international competition

MUNICIPAL OFFICES OF THE LACQ REGION BY GILLES BOUCHEZ ARCHITECTURE



01-Municipal-Offices-of-the-Lacq-Region-by-Gilles-Bouchez-Architecture


Architect Gilles Bouchez has devised an ingenious and eye-catching solution to the problem of solar gain on the south facing side of his design for the new municipal office building in Lacq, France.



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Working closely with expert fabricators for DuPont™ Corian®, Crea Diffusion of Metz in France, he has exploited the multiple benefits and high-performance properties of the material to create a finely patterned and ‘invisibly’ fixed parasol which prevents excessive thermal gains while also allowing for a beautiful interplay of shadow and sunlight.


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Gilles Bouchez explains, “I wanted to find an aesthetic and contemporary alternative to solar shading for building, a breaking-through solution, something in pure white that would not store heat, open enough to allow the light pass through and views to be glimpsed, robust but without having obvious structure. My idea was to achieve a sense of ‘floating’ panels, which could be appreciated from both the interior and exterior of the building, with an extra dimension created by the movement of shadows throughout the day.”


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The Community of the Cities of Lacq (CCL) is a local government institution created by the administrative fusion of 47 different municipal entities within the region. Located in the Lacq Basin, the new centralised office building was designed to visually, practically and dynamically reflect the scope of the brief covered by the CCL: from economic development to education, from housing management to environmental and energy control, and from cultural and sporting programmes to the safety of its citizens.


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“The solution proposed by Gilles Bouchez responded beautifully to these requirements, together with solving an important function in terms of controlling the effects of sunlight on the building, and this was achieved with pleasingly original and innovative aesthetics,” says Dominique Bernard, CCL Vice-President, in charge of the project. The individual facade panels made from DuPont™ Corian® (in dimensions of 3 m high X 2 m wide X 12 mm thickness) were fabricated to fit an external wall measuring 40m wide x 6m high, with a total surface area of 251sq.m.


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Applied here in the pure and pristine Designer White colour for DuPont™ Corian® the performance of the material in terms of weather, graffiti, staining and UV resistance has been proven in existing installations over many years, but also comes with a 10 year guarantee. It was important to the architect that the beauty of the facade, with its perforated pattern of random circles in varying diameters, could be enjoyed from both without and within the building, and the solar shading panels also had to work in harmony with the glazed wall to its interior.


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Therefore the solution-based skills of fabricators Crea Diffusion were called into action and they developed a special fixing system for the facade, in which vertical steel cables are positioned at 65cm intervals, onto which the panels are then ‘stapled.’ This innovative system gives the appearance of having no visible structure, adding to the ethereal appeal of the installation, and further enabled by the lightweight and easy-to-work-with nature of DuPont™ Corian®. The beauty if light, both natural and artificial, is fundamental to this design – and the facade in DuPont™ Corian® manages, manipulates and enhances its effects.


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The high reflectivity of the positive surface area within the sparkling facade prevents overheating from solar gains to the interior – and therefore cuts down on cooling costs and improves occupier comfort and productivity. Meanwhile the negative space created by the perforations allows for a spellbinding interplay of light and shadow, evocative of the dappled effects of sunshine through a leafy forest.


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Furthermore, when natural light fades, the artificial illumination to the interior is reflected back into the room by the pure white panels, thus requiring lower levels of electric lighting. Gilles Bouchez has also designed a decorative LED lighting system integrated to the facade, with chromatically adaptable light sources placed at ground level and mid-height, in between the Corian® sunscreen and the glazed wall, and oriented upwards to optimise the relief effect of the panels.


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The versatility, workability and proven performance of DuPont™ Corian® has elegantly answered all the key requirements for this project, from aesthetic to functional, while also adding to the energy efficiency of the building. This service to the design is set to be sustained for the long term, as even if any unlikely damage should occur to the facade, individual panels can be repaired on site in most cases and the freshness can be maintained with a simple high pressure water and detergent cleaning system.


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Location: Mourenx, France


Year: 2013

Client: Lacq Region

Photo: Arthur Péquin

KÖ-BOGEN BY DANIEL LIBESKIND



01-Kö-Bogen-by-Daniel-Libeskind

Kö-Bogen, currently under construction, is a six-story 432,300-square-foot office and retail complex in downtown Düsseldorf and marks an important transition between urban space and landscape.
 
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Two city blocks will be joined with one continuous roof line, forming a unified space for walking, shopping and working.

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The building will also create a connected space between the Schadowplatz, a pedestrian street, and the Hofgarten, the central park in Düsseldorf.

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A two-story connecting bridge with roof terrace will connect the east and west blocks of Kö-Bogen and between the two blocks will be green courtyards, which will alsp provide generous daylight to the interior spaces.

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Permeated cuts into Kö-Bogen itself will allow for the landscape to naturally blend and flow into the building space.

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The green courtyards and green roof become part of a new environment that bridges urban space with park space, a fitting entryway to and from the Hofgarten.

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Location: Dusseldorf, Germany
Architects: Daniel Libeskind
Structural Engineer: NAi Nagaraj Ingenieure
Mechanical / Electrical / Plumbing Engineer:Winter Ingenieure
Civil Engineer: Ingenieurbüro Wendt
Façade: Murphy Facade Studio + Infacon
Cost Control General Contractor:Zechbau GmbH
Buildings Physics: Graner + Partner | Ingenieure
Status: Under construction
Building size:
Base Design - 40,165 sq.m
Underground Parking - 13,547 sq.m
Alternative Design - 38,097 sq.m
Year: 2013
Client: Die Developer