Should
be the building of College sober and without life so that the students are form
academically? Not!! They thought in Melbourne...
Hello,
in the fearless constructive adventure in the I'm embarked, a condition
(unchanging) is to choose an island where I will develop the new building,
other condition (untouchable) is to build with materials that I go finding in
my search and the last condition (undisputed) is that the design is consistent
with my popular character and my unique and personal style. This week I've been
on the island of Læsø, located in Denmark and famous for the extraction of salt
with which trade their inhabitants, have a warm climate for the area where it
is located and have the Læsø Kur (a spa in an old Presbyterian Church).
I don´t know if the Lord Aristotle
Socrates Onassis (famous for being the richest man of his time and have a good
yacht) he is entertained watching the clouds trying to establish similarities
with terrestrial objects; what I do know is that I, Rodolfo, I do
it, but not with clouds: I look for similarities that may have buildings with
other elements. On this occasion I have found a very funny similarity, a
building that, in my opinion, is similar to a multicolor porcupine, moreover,
is a building that you would want to have in your neighborhood.
Seventeenth stop: The RMIT SAB Building
I have
a friend who studied in Melbourne which says that you have not lived if you
have not passed at least one year there, of course I think that this girl has
not traveled much, but for love I not tell her, however, I understand what she
is meant. Melbourne is an open and cosmopolitan city with a great cultural and
social life, was capital of Australia (but no longer) and is one of the places
with more students from outside its borders. This last is very noticeable in
the environment that generates in its surroundings and, also, in the fantastic
offer of its University, RMIT (Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology) that has always been at the
forefront of his country in architectural design. The best example is the building
that causes this article: Swanston academic building (or SAT).
The study of architecture Lyons has
been responsible for the eccentric, fun and functional design of the building.
The data we have to study: the building covers 35,000 square meters of
constructed area arranged in 12 plants (one basement and 11 over the street);
it cost 170 million Australian dollars (to change some 133 million dollars or
117 million euros); It contains 12 classrooms, 64 teaching spaces and 10
specialized learning places (each on a different floor), these places are
designed so the students can meet, spend the time or, simply, to study their
favorite subjects.
The
building already has been awarded by the Green Building Council of Australia (GBCA)
thanks to its design environmentally sustainable, getting five star-green
(there is only a building with six stars in Australia). Inside, the facilities
consist of equipment of last generation, walls that are cut sharply, ceilings
with irregular surfaces and an extensive palette of colors that administered
the areas, besides having green spaces and leisure. Produces hot water using solar energy and has a system for collecting
rainwater and grey water for subsequent reuse, a natural ventilation system
which involves the ventilation between the rooms and use of more than 500
chilled beams (cooling system through exchange of heat between columns of
water and air) in the construction.
The Anodized Aluminium
The
building has an aluminum envelope, made of eight different colors,
the aluminium envelops vertically the building irregularly, creating angles
straight or curved. But the colours are
not random, as one would assume, are located according to the area of the city
that looks to the façade which occupies it, is (literally) a reflection
pixelated, as if we look at us in the mirror and we see pixels, don't tell me
it's not great. Part of the building over the Swanston Street is a large
overhang of two storeys high, but the facade has two features that you should
not miss: the aluminum panels have a triangular form and great part of them
protruding from the facade as sunshades (is what makes that I called it
porcupine) this together with the double-glazed, helps to reduce the heating
effect of the sun, and the second feature, the better for me, is the constant
interruption of aluminum skin to see inside the classrooms in large windows.
The Sapphire Aluminium company
has been the responsible to supply aluminum panels that the construction
company Brookfield Multiplex has
used in the façade. These aluminum panels are of 4 mm thick and it is anodized.
The anodized consists, basically, in
oxidize a metallic element by electrolytic reactions, causing the creation of a
layer of oxide which, in the case of the aluminium, protects the material from
the outside environment. The oxidized layer that covers the material gives
it greater resistance to abrasion, corrosion or climate change, so it not can
disperse in the form of flakes or blisters. The anodized aluminum is an ideal
material for the outside of our building.
Important: the oxide layer that forms the
anodized aluminum is measured in microns (millionths of a meter) and is of
vital importance that the thickness of this layer is according with the
environment exterior to the aluminum. In our case, the
friends of Sapphire have used an anodized of 25 microns, which is optimum even
in industrial or marine atmospheres. Each supplier must inform us of the
microns that should have its material and if is recommended for the use in our
case, but in a building we must not accept less than 10µ (µ = microns) and not
more than 30µ (the first case by insufficient and the second by
disproportionate).
From now on, if every time you look an
aluminum window, you ask how many microns thick have the object, it will mean
that you have read carefully. Bye bye.
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