Architecture Thesis
Architecture Thesis
Architecture Thesis
JU L 0 2 2003
June 2003
LIBRARIES
Signature of A uthor.............................................
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Department of Architecture
May 22, 2003
Certified by...........................................
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William Porter
Norman B. and Muriel Leventhal Professor of Architecture and Planning
Thesis Supervisor
Accepted by........................................-..............................
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ian-Beinart
f orC$
THESIS COMMITTEE
Thesis Advisor
William Porter
Norman B. and Muriel Leventhal Professor of Architecture and Planning
Thesis Reader
Stanford Anderson
Professor of History and Architecture; Head, Department of Architecture
Thesis Reader
John Ochsendorf
Assistant Professor of Building Technology
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I would like to thank Bill Porter for his continued support, guidance and contribution to this thesis.
Bill, your wisdom and kindness will be with me for the rest of my life.
I would also like to thank my readers Stanford Anderson and John Ochsendorf. Thank you for your
encouragement and critical discussion. Your involvement has given this work a level of depth that
would not have been possible without you.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter ]
Establishing a C ontext................................................................................
Chapter 2
A Brief History of Sustainability................................................................14
Chapter 3
Norman Foster: Leading the Way..............................................................32
Chapter 4
Richard Meier: From White to Green.......................................................
52
Chapter 5
The Emergence of Sustainable Practice in Superstructures.......................67
Chapter 6
M aking an A rgum ent..................................................................................
B ibliography .................................................................................................
91
114
Chapter 1
Establishing a Context
The discipline of architecture in the twentieth century can be defined by the emergence
of the Modem movement and the multiple variations of the movement that ensued.
While significant, and founded upon noble, socially-driven intentions, it may be argued
that later variations of the Modem movement, eventually, evolved primarily into pursuits of style, metaphorical rhetoric, diagrammatic expression, aesthetic and formal play.
As exceedingly esoteric discourse became fashionable, architecture became increasingly superficial. While this may be a hyper-critical, over-simplification of late-twentieth century high-design, it is becoming a widely recognized judgment. As the Modem
movement broadly influenced twentieth century architecture, what movement will define architecture in the twenty-first?
As contemporary society becomes increasingly aware and concerned with ecological
issues, more is expected of the discipline. Many of the established architectural practices and traditions of the past are not acceptable today. In a departure from twentieth
century modernist tendencies, it is no longer desirable for architecture to hold dominion
over nature. Today it is necessary for buildings to participate in the creation of a logical,
symbiotic balance between the built and natural environments. The discipline of architecture is discovering renewed responsibility through the acknowledgement of legitimate concerns; the health and well-being of its occupants, environmental accountability
and the efficiency of buildings. While not denying formal expression and aesthetic
vision, efficiency and sustainability are becoming participatory elements within architectural design.
It is the position of this thesis that this recent repositioning of attitude and concern has
caused a convergence of sustainable technologies and architectural design expression.
The pursuits of sustainability and design are no longer mutually exclusive endeavors.
Today's notion of environmental responsibility has become integrated to all architectural stylistic categories, unlike sustainability of the past which primarily existed within
Establishinga Context
its own marginalized grouping. This convergence is fundamentally affecting the discipline of architecture in both process and product. As a result, a new formal vocabulary
is emerging.
This thesis seeks to identify and examine the physical evidence of this recent movement. The physical manifestation of the synthesis of sustainable technologies and design expression can be seen in a wide range of projects throughout the discipline and is
bound by no aesthetic or formal category. These concerns have seemingly transcended
all formal categorization, and are affecting architecture regardless of function, style, or
theoretical position. While the emergence of a new formal vocabulary is clearly indicative of a change in design process, this discussion will refrain from addressing this
issue. While, acknowledged as important, the concern of process requires its own investigation. The issue of product-or physical evidence-is significant enough to necessitate its own discussion. We will address this change in formal vocabulary within
the discipline of architecture and hypothesize as to how it is affecting the industry.
To investigate this stated convergence we will employ a method of research focused
around various case studies that are indicative of specific emerging concerns. The projects
examined represent a wide cross-section of the discipline and a myriad of formal and
aesthetic categories. Because it would be unfeasible, and unnecessary, to consider every recent project that is relevant to our discussion, many of the case studies chosen are
representative of numerous similar works not addressed. The projects examined here
are primarily high profile works by notable architects. The benefit of using identifiable
works is that they are both physically and intellectually accessible to a large audience.
As well, high profile projects are usually indicative of emerging concerns and trends
within the discipline.
After a brief discussion of the influence and multiple trajectories of past sustainability
movements, we begin by exploring contemporary architects who have committed their
entire careers to the pursuit of environmentally responsible architecture. Architects
such as Norman Foster, Renzo Piano, Nicholas Grimshaw and Thomas Herzog are a
Establishinga Context
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postulate that the shared environmental intentions of architects from across the discipline are central to the emergence of a new
architectural typology. Although formally
diverse, many of these projects achieve similar levels of integration between sustainable
technologies and other building systems that
Establishinga Context
is unique to this current movement. And although implemented in different ways, this
integration is primary to the recent acceptance of sustainability. Sustainable technologies have become a participatory feature within larger architectural pursuits.
Significant scientific and empirical research is required when attempting to bridge the
disparity between architectural design and sustainability; two historically autonomous
pursuits. Being rigorous with regard to methods of assessment of existing and emerging
technologies is fundamentally important to the advancement and future success ofbuilding technologies. Without this persistence, the effectiveness of such technologies will
remain an unfulfilled ambition, and never achieve their environmental objectives. It is
prudent to be critical of sustainable technologies for the purpose of advancement; however, one must also be realistic with expectations placed upon the effectiveness of current technologies.
The buildings discussed in this thesis are not comprehensively sustainable projects.
And although they are presented in a positive light, it is acknowledged that they are
simply the beginnings of a movement founded upon environmental concerns. However, each project to be discussed is important-for one reason or another-to the advancement of the convergence of sustainable technologies and architectural design. As
the pursuit of these technologies is still in its infancy, it is one of the positions of this
thesis that, currently, the intentions behind many of these projects are more important
than the tangible successes. If architecture maintains its intentions of environmental
responsibility, inevitably, technologies and techniques will produce their desired objectives. Therefore, it is considered acceptable, for the purpose of our discussion, to investigate building that only partially or marginally succeed in their efforts toward
sustainability.
This investigation of the convergence of sustainable technologies and design expression is undertaken here due to its acute relevance to the state of contemporary architecture. It is the contention of this thesis that this issue-above all others-will be what
defines the discipline in the twenty-first century. And although the digital revolution in
Establishing a Context
computer technologies and software are progressing daily-altering the process by which
architecture is designed and built-these developments are but a means to an end, and
not an end in themselves. The advancement of digital technologies will prove invaluable to the pursuit for a more sustainable and responsible architecture. However, it is
essential to focus on the paramount issues facing all of mankind in the coming century;
the question of future energy resources, environmental responsibility, and the health and
success of generations to come. In the twentieth century buildings contributed greatly
to the destruction of the environment and the consumption of natural resources. It is the
position of this thesis that twenty-first century architecture will necessarily be defined
by the pursuit of reversing this trend. The case studies and discussion that follow are the
beginnings of this pursuit.
Establishinga Context
Chapter 2
A Brief History of Sustainability
It may be argued that the existence of environmentally responsible and effective constructions dates back to the very infancy of human existence in the traditions of early
vernacular building throughout the world. However, for the purpose of this research we
will forgo a lengthy historiography of ancient indigenous construction techniques and
ingenuity, and we will direct our attention to the twentieth century. We will attempt to
address only those most significant happenings and trajectories within the last century
that have had serious, and to some extent lasting, influence upon sustainable technologies and the discipline of architecture and construction.
Since the advent of the Modern Movement a century ago there has been a lineage, a
sporadic continuum, of architects and craftsman who have considered it not only important, but also essential, that architecture relate to its environment and its occupants in a
responsible manner. There have been those of imagination and creativity who have
contributed, in one form or another, to the development of environmentally conscious
building techniques through technological advancement and simple, lucid intelligence.
Within this brief discussion of those who have made contributions to the evolution of
sustainability, we make a distinction between two categories of architects. The pure
problem-solvers and those who create solutions within greater design vision.
There have been those of extreme position and scientific persuasion, like Buckminster
Fuller, who advocated a purely engineering-based approach to solve the difficult dilemmas facing architecture relating to environmental sensitivity and energy efficiency. Fuller,
his followers, and others who fall into this pedigree of designer/problem-solver have a
most decidedly utopian edge to their idealistic solutions and theoretical positions. This
assessment of Fuller and those like him, being overly idealistic takes nothing away from
their noble intentions and contributions to the disciplines of architecture, engineering,
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
Manhattan.
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
of both gasoline and home heating oil. These severe increases brought widespread
panic to the nation at large. The resounding impact in the United States of this embargo
was compounded by high consumption patterns and a panic-stricken market.
The problem of high consumption was a major issue that emerged from the oil crisis.
Only after this scare did the United States government and the American public begin
serious efforts to curb its high consumption rates. The total United States consumption
of imported oil declined significantly in the late 1970's and early 1980's following the
crisis. High oil prices prompted consumers to conserve energy and switch to other
forms of fuel. This is an important fact regarding our discussion of the passive solar
movement in architecture of the 1970's.
Whereas the Middle East oil embargo was a catalyst for the energy crisis of the early
1970's, the energy crisis was a catalyst for alternate forms of energy and environmentally conscious movements of the late 1970's and early 1980's. The passive solar movement in architecture cannot be entirely attributed to the energy crisis, but it certainly was
one of the leading factors that stimulated it, and provoked much research and exploration.
Much of the research pursued within the passive solar movement was quite radical in
nature. However, as stated earlier, much of this radical experimentation produced some
fascinating case studies, and succeeded in furthering the discipline toward environmental responsibility. An excellent example of extreme, passive solar experimentation is
the Baer House near Albuquerque, New Mexico built in 1972. This project incorporated a system called the Drumwall. In this system, steel oil drums are filled with water
and stacked in vertical racks inside of a glass window wall. The drums, painted black
on the end that faces the sun, absorb solar heat and then release it slowly into the interior
after the sun goes down (Watson 35). Operable insulating panels on the exterior side of
the water filled drums control excessive heat gain in summer months. Obviously, this
passive system had many complications and proved only marginally effective.
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
House: Your Place in the Sun (1977) or Survey of Passive Solar Buildings (1978) by
AIA Research Corporation.
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
design. Paul Rudolph and Fred Keck, quietly experimented with passive solar techniques, and sustainable technologies in their
respective works. The Keck brothers and
Paul Rudolph must be recognized as significant, as pioneers, in the evolution of
sustainability because they did something
that Fuller and the extremist of the 1970's
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
digm. This belief produced a series of Modernist houses and buildings in the 1930's and
1940's that pioneered environmentally responsible modem design. Although largely
unrecognized, in their own time, for their
energy consciousness and contribution to the
future of sustainability, the Keck brothers
would gain widespread recognition for their
clean Modernist aesthetic throughout their
careers.
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
carry some heating effect into the evening (Watson 55). These straightforward passive
solar strategies appear obvious to most of us today, seventy years later. However, in
1934 many of these simple, but effective techniques, had never been used or explored in
early Modernist architecture.
The Keck brothers did not only use passive solar techniques in Exhibition designs.
These strategies became a consistent part of their residential design for decades. One of
the Keck's earliest passive solar private residences was the Herbert Burning House in
Wilmette, Illinois 1935. In this project the Keck's used many passive strategies that
would become standard practice in many other projects. This project paid particular
close attention to sun angles, orientation of the house, overhangs, thermal massing and
natural shade. The Keck's also improved the design of their windows by introducing
external aluminum Venetian blinds. These allowed for bright or totally dark rooms,
replaced storm windows in the winter, regulated the flow of air coming into the room in
the summer, and rendered draperies unnecessary (Menocal 19).
George and Fred Keck were not only architects working within the Modernist archetype
that were concerned with sustainable practices. Paul Rudolph working in Florida from
the mid 1940's to the early 1960's produced a series of extraordinarily elegant beach
homes that effortlessly incorporated passive solar techniques into the designs. He created striking Modern buildings that had the unique characteristics of a particular place.
Rudolph's work in Florida explored the idea that modern architecture, more specifically, the International Style, could be sensitive to regional expression. Departing from
Modernist doctrine of the period, Rudolph attempted to make an intimate connection to
the landscape by using indigenous materials, local construction techniques when applicable, and made reference to vernacular expression. Rudolph's regionalism became his
vehicle for inserting specific notions of place and cultural context into the vocabulary of
contemporary architecture (Domin 139). Because of this unique interpretation on the
International Style, he produced some remarkable work that brought him international
recognition.
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
Burning House,
Keck & Keck Architects, 1935.
Great importance was given to climatic considerations throughout this project. Cross
ventilation strategies were a significant design factor. Louvers designed to block the
sun, while still allowing air to cross ventilate the interior space were a considerable
feature within the project. In fact, entire
walls were constructed of specially designed
louvers that allowed them to be adjusted
from completely open to entirely opaque.
Also, the structure was elevated just slightly
off the ground to help capture prevailing
breezes coming off the water. Exterior overhangs were placed at appropriate elevations
to combat afternoon heat gain. With all the
simple, yet intelligent, low-tech strategies incorporated within the project, these environmentally sensitive features were just one
and the Glass House relies upon their transparent disposition in the landscape. Their
radical concept of complete openness affords observation of the surroundings. However, this experience remains primarily visual. The Healy House, by comparison, engages the full sensory experience of the site and landscape. The breezes, sounds and
smells of the immediate environment become part of the experience of the house, creating an extraordinary sense of place. Additionally, unlike the Mies and Johnson projects,
the experience of the surroundings can be modified from the interior by adjusting the
walls. The intense connection to the environment and climate provide the Healy House
with supplementary physical and metaphysical depth. What is exceptional about this
project is the fact that Rudolph explored a connection with the environment and regional cultural expression, while working within the austere early modernist paradigm.
The Healy Guest House is but one example of many projects by Paul Rudolph that
explore the connection between architecture and sensitivity to the environment and cultural context. Rudolph pioneered such work throughout the 1940's and 1950's. Unfortunately, many of these low-tech experimental devices Rudolph utilized to connect his
houses with climate and culture were abandoned for a mediated, controlled interior
environment with the advent of ubiquitous air-conditioning.
This concise discussion of the evolution of sustainability in the twentieth century is in
no way intended to be a comprehensive survey. The intention here is simply to provide
a context for further discussion about the state of contemporary architecture with its
growing emphasis on sustainability. By tracing two alternate, yet simultaneous, trajectories through the history of sustainability, we are able to gain perspective of those
successes and failures that have brought the movement and study to where it is today.
By locating specific moments in time, events, or projects that are relevant to today's
situation, we are better able to postulate the future of architecture and sustainability.
Although the ambitions of Buckminster Fuller and the passive solar advocates of the
1970's were never realized, we can certainly learn from both their innovative research
and case studies. The scientific knowledge produced by these imaginative thinkers has
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
been the foundation of countless sustainable technological innovations over the last
forty years. However, we must also take careful consideration of their failure to gain
widespread appreciation due to extremist tendencies. The advancement of sustainability
must be incorporated with, not dominant over, architectural vision.
The influential work of the Keck brothers, Paul Rudolph and others like them is exceptional in that it endeavored to incorporate sustainable practices into larger design considerations. This very fact is what makes their work still relevant today. Current architects and scholars would be well advised to rediscover the work of these men and learn
from their simple, yet elegant and inspired ideas regarding the synthesis between architecture and its environment. Norman Foster, Renzo Piano, and Glenn Murcutt for example, throughout their distinguished careers have followed a similar trajectory as that
of Rudolph and the Keck brothers. They are the direct beneficiaries of the groundwork
laid by these designers. We will discuss more closely the work of contemporary architects like Norman Foster to gain an understanding of their influence upon the discipline
of architecture and sustainable concerns. We will also examine those more recent subscribers to the practice of environmentally sensitive building, like Richard Meier, who
after extraordinarily successful careers as high-design architects, have now found it
important to incorporate sustainability issues into their work. The influence of both of
these types of architects will be pivotal to our discussion of an environmental consciousness emerging within the architectural mainstream.
A BriefHistory of Sustainability
Chapter 3
Norman Foster: Leading the Way
When attempting to locate the recent movement or shift within the discipline of architecture toward a new horizon of environmental consciousness, it is fundamentally important to study those architects who have consistently been ahead of the curve; those
who have been the most innovative, the most creative in the use of emerging technologies and materials in concert with design considerations. In the anticipation of future
concerns for natural and non-renewable resources, Norman Foster has been on the leading edge of design. Before the energy crisis of the 1970's and well after the energy
conscious dialectic had faded, Foster experimented with and produced energy efficient
buildings.
Norman Foster has been an advocate of environmentally responsible, energy efficient
design since the inception of his career over thirty years ago. Once categorized as "High
Tech" for his design aesthetic, Foster has consistently proved that his interest in emerging technology goes well beyond the visual. Within the last decade Foster Associates
have emerged as one ofthe premier design oriented, technologically advanced and environmentally sensitive firms in the world. What has afforded them the opportunity to
evolve in this way is their innate belief that architecture and technology are not mutually
exclusive. They are to be pursued in concert to achieve the most appropriate solution
and design for any given problem. This attitude toward architecture is certainly not
avant-garde or extraordinary in any way. Architects for centuries have pursued technological advancement through their work. What is extraordinary however, is the extent
to which Foster Associates have realized this connection between architecture and technology and the effect that their work has had on the discipline itself.
There is a relatively small group of architects that we may look to as standard-bearers
within the discipline who have spent their careers exploring a synthesis between design,
technology and the resultant benefits. This group includes architects such as Renzo
Piano, Nicholas Grimshaw, Thomas Herzog and of course, the focus of this chapter,
Norman Foster. We label this group as standard-bearers because they have been the
leading advocates for many years of issues and concerns that the rest of the industry is
only recently beginning to regard as necessary. While these architects were somewhat
on the periphery of the discipline for decades exploring topics of energy efficiency and
sustainable technologies, they are not alone in their interests and pursuits any longer.
Many architects have, recently, begun investigating and implementing similar design
strategies regarding environmentally responsible buildings. We will explore some of
these more recent additions at a later time. For this chapter however, we will primarily
direct our attention to Norman Foster and the evolution of his work over the last thirty
years. For this discussion, Foster will serve as representative of the select group of
architects who have explored sustainable technologies throughout their careers. We
will examine closely some of Foster's earliest work to gain an understanding of the
technologies and strategies he has continuously attempted to implement and improve
upon for decades. By comparing these with one of his most recent and celebrated projects,
The Reichstag Parliament Building in Berlin, we may achieve an understanding of the
importance of Foster and his work as a standard-bearer within the discipline of architecture.
In an essay written in 1979 the famed architectural theorist and critic Reyner Banham
made the argument that Norman Foster does not implement high-technology in his buildings, he uses appropriate-technology. This is an important distinction and one that needs
to be explored further. Because much of Fosters early work consisted of lightweight
materials that were usually associated with high-technology, Foster was unfairly categorized as using a High-Tech aesthetic regardless of cost or effectiveness. This Banham
contends could not be farther from reality. Foster has always tried to use the materials
and strategies appropriate for any given project. For example, the various IBM buildings designed by Foster are extremely high energy use buildings. Considering the extreme energy requirements of these buildings, at the time of construction, sustainable
technology was insufficient to have any noticeable effect. Therefore resources were not
expended on such technologies. However, for other projects like the Sainsbury Centre
for the Arts, built around a similar time period, Foster was able to explore relatively
light servicing strategies being that the building had modest energy requirements.
Foster has never put stylistic considerations ahead of what he felt was the appropriate
technological response to a given program. This has been a problem for critics. They
have found it difficult to accurately categorize Foster's work. Unlike other architects
who have been categorized as High-Tech, Foster has never gone out of his way to evolve
an architectural style or an iconography of detail that is unequivocally High-Tech. Reyner
Banham put it quite eloquently when he said "There is no single Foster style, though the
range of stylishness is close and connected. But none of the styles in the range specifically labels a particular type or quantity of servicing, and this makes life very difficult
for the average hit-and-run journalist, or lecturer playing solitaire with a hundred slides
in the AA library. The rock-bottom, bottom line fact about Foster Associates is that you
can't tell just by looking; you have to go inside" (Banham 5).
Although Norman Foster does not subscribe to a particular style or aesthetic in this
work, he continuously uses new materials, cutting edge structural techniques, experimental enclosure systems and innovative tectonic connections. All these elements he
utilizes concurrently to create ecologically friendly buildings. Therefore the most recent categorization of Eco-Tech is probably one that is rather appropriate. His work
does certainly synthesize emerging technologies with ecological concerns. This new
categorization is only important in that it distinguishes between Foster and many of his
contemporaries like Richard Rogers or Jean Nouvel. These architects, and many like
them, are more concerned with the superficial appearance of technology than they are in
buildings that actually utilize technology toward specific purposes. They use a technological aesthetic in their architecture. However, when inspected more thoroughly, much
of their work is technologically quite average. Whether one chooses to categorize Norman
Foster as High-Tech, Eco-Tech, or Reyner Banham's Appropriate-Tech is insignificant.
The importance resides in the work itself. Foster has for three decades produced buildings with a higher purpose than simple empty rhetoric or formal metaphor. His belief in
the logical synthesis of architecture and technology to achieve ecologically responsible
the Villa Savoye) (Quantrill 82). The planning and arrangement of the interior of the
building as well as the hung-glass cladding
of the perimeter all make strong reference
to Le Corbusier. The most celebrated early modem idiom of the Willis Faber building is
the roof garden. This design feature has become one of the most popular characteristics
and most frequently used areas of the building.
Apart from the Modernist references, the Willis Faber building was a highly innovative
project for its time. These innovations are what will be most pertinent to our discussion.
First let us re-address the roof garden. Although, championed in the early 1930's by Le
Corbusier and his followers, the roof garden never achieved widespread use. It forever
remained a theoretical concept for early Modernist and Futurist. Foster incorporated
the roof garden into the Willis Faber building with a multitude of purposes in mind.
Aside from the fact that the occupants of the building enjoy the outdoor green space and
use it frequently for everything from lunch breaks to sun bathing, the garden roof itself
provides tremendous insulation from temperature fluctuation. The consequence of this
is a rather significant reduction of heating and cooling costs. The Willis Faber building,
on average, has rather typical energy consumption patterns. It is neither sensationally
high, nor sensationally low. However, considering the amount of glass on the fagade of
this edifice, and the intense use of the interior space, one would expect high energy
consumption. Also, the roof garden is such a good insulating quilt for the structure that
expansion joints, typically used in buildings of similar scale and construction, were
unnecessary. It is important to note that Foster used a non-traditional design feature like
a roof garden as not only a wonderful space for the occupants, but also as a functional
environmental passive system to enhance energy efficiency. Also, Foster anticipated
the oil crisis of the mid to late 1970's by using natural gas as the primary fuel source of
the building.
The structure of the Willis Faber building can be boiled down to remarkably few elements: a set of internal columns, a cantilevered slab, and a set of edge-columns. What
is significant though, is that this relatively basic structural layout and cantilevered floor
slab allow the facade to materialize. The curved glass curtain-wall fagade is clearly the
most important design feature of the Willis Faber project. The curved glass fagade, of
course, could be likened back to Mies van der Rohe's designs for glass skyscrapers in
37
or structure.
While the Willis Faber building has been the
topic of countless discussions and research
papers, for our purposes, we will refrain from
expanding our analysis of it. What is important to note about this project is that Fos-
process of removing and replacing a panel takes approximately five minutes. The panels themselves are constructed of a foam-filled, highly reflective anodized aluminum
surface. While the outer aluminum surface reflects heat, the foam within the panels
have an exceptionally high insulation value. The panels themselves are sealed with
neoprene gaskets which double as rainwater channels, thus obviating the use of traditional gutters (Abel 126). The inner skin of the structure consists of adjustable aluminum louvers with additional motorized banks under the glazed areas. These, combined
with the interchangeable external panels and a highly flexible system of electric display
lighting, produce an almost infinitely adjustable natural light control system.
Sainsbury Centre is a prime example of Foster Associates implementing technologies
for the purpose of energy efficient design. From the nature of its prefabricated materials, to the enclosing walls with its double thickness, reflectivity, insulation value, combined with the engineering of air movement through the space as an alternative to air
conditioning, Sainsbury Centre is a light-weight, low impact, low energy consumption
building. Completed three years after the Willis Faber building, Sainsbury is another
stride along Foster's trajectory of ecologically sensitive and responsible architecture
that will eventually define his career. Reyner Banham appreciated the subtleties of the
design and the craft of the construction of the Sainsbury Centre so much that he wrote of
it "If 'appropriate technology' is to be Foster Associates slogan, than Sainsbury will
certainly be the example by which that slogan is measured".
These last two projects we have looked at, the Willis Faber building and Sainsbury
Centre, provide us with a good understanding of Foster's intentions early in his career.
While obviously interested in emerging technologies and their impact on architecture,
he also had a deep concern for how the built environment impacted nature and how
technology could be used to limit the consumption of non-renewable resources. While
Foster consistently worked with these issues throughout his career, the next project we
will address, the Reichstag, will provide an understanding as to the extent of sophistication and advanced nature of the work of Foster Associates.
vi~
The Reichstag
From the moment of its inauguration, the Reichstag would be a symbol of German
pride. It served as the seat of Parliament throughout the years of the Weimar Republic
and beyond until 1933 when a suspicious fire destroyed much of the interior. Using this
fire to his political advantage, Adolf Hitler declared a state of emergency and seized
dictatorial control of Germany. The building experienced continuous Allied bombing
from 1943 to 1945 during the Second World War. When Berlin was taken by the Soviets in May of 1945, the Reichstag became a symbolic prize for the conquerors of the
city. Numerous propaganda photographs taken by the Allied forces perpetuated the
Reichstag's almost mystical significance throughout the next several decades. During
the Cold War, the Reichstag became a symbol of Germany's division because of its
location against the border of East and West Germany. Throughout the decades of the
Cold War, the West German Parliament convened in Bonn and the historic seat of Parliament was further ignored. In the 1960's a simple and highly insensitive renovation
took place so that the Reichstag could be used for minor government agencies. Although functionally insignificant throughout this period, the Reichstag maintained its
symbolic stature.
It was not until the reunification of German in November of 1989 that talk of the return
of German government to Berlin began. In 1992 a competition to renovate the Reichstag
building to be used for the new seat of Parliament for unified Germany was held. After
being chosen as one of five winners in the initial competition, Foster Associates rethought and redesigned their entire proposal for the final stage of competition. In 1993
they were chosen winner of the competition. After changes were made to the design, in
1994 construction began on the new Reichstag.
After completion in 2000 The Reichstag was an immediate success. The German public adored it; although, the building was not without its critics. Some complained that
the new Reichstag was more of a monument to sustainable technology and progress
than it was a representation of German democracy and unification. This rather narrow
opinion of the building only proves how innovative the project actually is. The fact of
the matter is that the government requested a highly environmentally responsible build-
4..82
power station, supplying neighboring buildings in the new government quarter (Jenkins
178).
The first element of the Reichstag that must
be addressed is the great cupola. This feature is the center-piece of the entire project
and also the one that influences most lighting, ventilation and environmental control
strategies within the building. The cupola
itself stands 23.5 meters above the roof of
the building and has a diameter of 40 meters.
It is constructed of 3000 square meters of laminated safety glass. These glass panels are
5x2 meters in size and consist of two layers of glass with an intermediate layer of vinyl
foil. Two helical ramps that allow visitors to journey to the top of the dome are integral
to the structure. The 1.5 meter wide ramps provide lateral stiffening and vertical loading. At the top of the ramp is an observation platform that soars over 40 meters above
the ground.
Resting directly above the main parliamentary chamber, the cupola, in concert with a
cone covered with 360 highly reflective glass mirrors, placed at the center of the dome,
bathes the chamber floor with a tremendous amount of natural light. So much in fact,
that during day light hours artificial lighting is not required for many months of the year.
The suspended, conical shaped mirror within the dome is also used to expel warm air
from the chamber. As warm air rises to the ceiling, it is taken into the cone and released
to the outside through a wide nozzle at the top of the cone. The system works almost
entirely naturally. It functions by utilizing a 'flue' effect generated by the shape of both
the cone and cupola. The lantern opening is fitted with a wind spoiler to encourage air
flow across the top of the cupola to facilitate the extraction process; it also protects
visitors on the viewing platform from adverse prevailing winds (Foster 183). Within
the cone itself are mechanical fans to assist the process when required. The power to
run these fans is generated by 100 photovoltaic cells, which are located on the south
facing section of the roof.
The cupola itself has a sun-tracking system that can be used to block direct sunlight.
Where sun angles are low enough for the sunlight not to interfere with proceedings on
the chamber floor, the shading device can be mechanically moved away to let light
through. When the chamber is in use after nightfall, artificial light from the chamber is
reflected upwards illuminating the cupola (Evans 70).
The chamber floor utilizes a natural ventilation system. As mentioned, the conical
mirror within the dome helps draw warm air out of the debating chamber and releases
the air to the outside using a flue effect. Up toward the top of the dome, axial fans and
comfortable temperature within the building. This inherent thermal mass provides a
relatively consistent base temperature which than can be adjusted using either passive
or active environmental control strategies.
Great importance was placed on operable windows as well in the new construction of
the Reichstag. It was stipulated by the client, the German government, that occupants of
the building be allowed to operate the windows in their immediate workspace. The
windows designed for the Reichstag use the original openings fitted with a system of
intelligent windows with two layers of glass that balance out extreme fluctuations of
temperature. The inner windows can be opened from the inside either manually or
automatically. The outer layer is laminated with a protective coating and has ventilation
joints that admit air from the outside. The void between the window system houses a
solar shading device as well (Schulz 107). The window system also provides a high
level of security for the building, especially for night time cooling, in that the outside
windows remain fixed while allowing the inner windows to be operable and even left
open at night.
The Reichstag's power plant bums refined vegetable oil derived from sunflower seeds.
This vegetable oil is burned in a cogenerator to produce electricity. Also know as 'biodiesel', this is a completely renewable natural fuel. It also bums far cleaner and more
efficient than traditional sources of energy production. The Reichstag use of natural,
renewable, vegetable oil has allowed for a 94% reduction in carbon dioxide emissions.
The building has been transformed from producing over 7000 tonnes of carbon dioxide
per annum to producing less than 450. Surplus heat is stored as hot water in an aquifer
300 meters below the ground. The water can be pumped up to heat the building or to
drive an absorption cooling plant to produce chilled water (Foster 133). This chilled
water can similarly be stored in an aquifer 60 meters below ground for later use. Much
of this chilled water stored in the cold water aquifer is used to supply the chilled ceilings
in many of the offices for summer cooling.
all the while maintaining the historic integrity of this national treasure.
When the construction began in 1994, the
renovation of the 1960's was peeled away.
What was discovered were the historic walls
of the Reichstag. And as it turned out, many
of the walls were covered with Russian graffiti from the closing days of World War Two.
A decision was made to retain a number of
areas of graffiti. The inscriptions have been
conserved by specialists who developed new
techniques to preserve the Reichstag's past.
The original fabric, whether damaged by the
fighting at the end of the war or by the conversion work in the 1960's has been retained
as far as possible in that original parts of the
building are clearly distinguished from those
that have been added subsequently by a
finely incised shadow gap marking the transitions between the two (Schulz 65).
porates all factors seamlessly into an extraordinary magnum opus of architectural design
expression. This balance is probably
Foster's greatest achievement with this
building. He was able to construct one of
the most technologically advanced, sustainable buildings in the world while simultaneously, preserving a piece of national history for the German people.
The Reichstag is indicative of Foster Associates attitude toward technology and
sustainability. For decades Foster has considered energy conservation as simply one
of many constraints of architectural design
last thirty years. This is certainly a factor when comparing Foster's early work with his
later projects. However, it is important to note that much of the sustainable technologies developed over the years has been directly related to Foster's projects and research.
He has consistently been on the leading edge in this field. Few architectural firms in the
world have continued, not only to research, but implement advanced, and many times
experimental, technologies into their work. This is one of many factors that sets them
apart form most of the discipline and solidifies them as standard-bearers.
In coming chapters we will examine architects and designers, like Richard Meier, who
have only recently become concerned with issues of sustainability and energy efficiency.
We will also explore how Norman Foster and his work has influenced some of these
'new-comers', and provided them with a paradigm to follow. Also, the work of Foster
Associates over the past thirty years, has provided a myriad of precedents and case
studies for a younger generation to learn from and improve upon.
Chapter 4
Richard Meier: From White to Green
Richard Meier has never been known for his environmental sensitivity. Until recently,
he has treated his gridded metal skins and glass curtain walls as abstract surfaces, without much regard for their thermal performance or energy efficiency. However, Meier's
recent attention to energy and environmental performance is changing not only his design process, but also the buildings themselves (Barreneche). Because of this very simple
fact, Richard Meier, becomes a pivotal character in our search for sustainable architecture as it relates to serious design expression. In our last chapter, we explored the work
of Norman Foster who is representative of a handful of architects that have spent their
entire careers investigating the synthesis of sustainable technologies and high design.
In our current discussion, Richard Meier, is representative of countless architects who
have only recently begun exploring sustainability issues in architecture. This is what
makes Richard Meier so significant to our discussion. Meier and his work are in many
ways symbolic of a shift in attitude within the discipline of architecture toward
sustainability, energy efficiency, and a newfound responsibility of architecture to the
environment.
Richard Meier, for decades, was arguably the preeminent living American architect.
The irony being that his architectural formal devices are far more European than American. Meier has built a career by remaining stubbornly faithful to a staunch, heroictwenties, avant-garde vocabulary. These Modernist tendencies were most likely learned
form his teacher and mentor Colin Rowe while at Cornell University in the 1950's.
Obviously heavily influenced by Le Corbusier, the significance of Meier's early work is
his manipulation of basic architectural elements within a once austere vocabulary. Very
early in his career Meier devised a parti for a multistory, basically rectangular building
that is approached through a dense section of smartly aligned rooms opening into a
voluminous space enclosed in glass. Through this organization, he introduced many
issues; the progression from dark to light, small to large, solid to void, and promenades
architecturales on bridges, ramps, and staircases (Giovannini). Meier has also always
been very conscious of layering within his buildings. His interest in spatial layering and
collage afford his projects a useful organizational tool to define both space and physical
elements. Early in his career Meier's buildings remained relatively geometrically severe while utilizing many of the aforementioned techniques. He continued with this
somewhat formulaic, yet highly successful, vocabulary for many years and produced a
myriad of important works. Later in his career, Meier would introduce baroque influences into his designs that would provide another layer of complexity.
For the purpose of our study, we are most interested in Richard Meier's current work
that incorporates sustainable technologies into his design vocabulary. However, to make
lucid the dramatic shift that has occurred within Meier's designs, it is fundamentally
important to this discussion to briefly address some of his early work. Only by achieving an understanding of what made Meier such a recognized and revered figure in the
world of architecture, may we truly appreciate the significance of his newfound interest
in sustainable issues. Therefore let us direct our attention to two of Richard Meier's
early works, the Smith House in Darien, Connecticut, and the Douglas House in Harbor
Springs, Michigan.
In 1963 Richard Meier established a private practice and launched his business with a
commission from his parents, a residence in Essex Falls, New Jersey. Two years later in
1965 Meier would build a house that would change his life forever; the Smith House in
Darien, Connecticut (1965-1967). This house would become a virtual manifesto of his
contribution to architecture in the last quarter of the twentieth century. Five years later
Meier built the Douglas House in Harbor Springs, Michigan that was for all intents and
purposes, quite similar to the Smith House. This was due to the fact that the clients of
the Douglas House, having seen the Smith House in a publication, requested a house
comparable in style and vocabulary to the Smith House. Due to the dramatic site of the
Douglas House, and of course architectural integrity, Meier did not design a replica of
the earlier house. He did however, build a house utilizing not only a similar vocabulary,
but similar design principles, techniques and design strategies. Most likely, because of
the dramatic site of the Douglas House overlooking Lake Michigan, the project in time,
became a more celebrated work than its distinguished predecessor.
The Smith House was Meier's first comprehensive essay on modem architecture. It is
also the first of his pristine white buildings
that would ultimately become his signature
aesthetic. The key elements associated with
his work are present in the Smith House; the
brilliant white exterior, expanses of plate
glass framed by finely proportioned piers and
mullions, distinct circulation features, minimal interiors and programmatic separation
between public and private spaces. There is
also clear commentary about issues such as
degree explosion". The public spaces; living room, dining room, and terraces all open
to the waterfront view while the private
realm is contained in the envelope core (ed.
Green).
Programmatically the Douglas and Smith houses are quite similar. Due to the extraordinary site however, the design for the Douglas house evolved somewhat differently. There
is a sharp downhill grade of the land that requires the house to be entered form the roof
level by a flying bridge and seems to shear off the top of the frontal plane. The only
parts of the edifice visible from the road are the roof and top floor; not until one crosses
the bridge does one perceive the five stories and 4,500 square feet of interior space. As
in the Smith House, the separation between public and private spaces is expressed by
solid and glazed walls respectively. The public side, the west, provides a lake view
from all floors. The east side, facing the road in the private zone, having smaller fenestration, and containing bedrooms and service spaces on all three levels (ed. Ockman).
The Smith and Douglas Houses reveal themselves as deliberately conceived like artificial objects inserted into the natural landscape, with which they establish a relationship
of visual contract. Their respective sites are similar: a wooded slope beside the water
shore. The answer to this setting is a prismatic volume rising over the terrain and defined by two planes, each clearly different in character to the other. In terms of spatial
organization, these two houses constitute a typological contribution of Richard Meier to
twentieth century residential architecture (Sainz). This tripartite organizational structure basically consists of three zones; the public space consisting of living and dining,
the private containing the bedrooms and baths, and the third zone being the circulation
space which clearly separates the first two. A simple organizational strategy which had
a significant impact on American residential architecture for decades to come.
The Smith and Douglas Houses are both very good examples of Richard Meier's early
work. These houses launched his career as one of the leading American architects of the
1970's. It is important to note in this discussion of Meier's early work the design intentions and patterns that were established. The early work of Richard Meier is quite
complex with strong references to early modernism. He pays particularly close attention to spatial complexities, light, detail, color and clear organizational strategies just to
name a few. There is however, absolutely no concern for environmental issues or energy efficiency. This fact is not intended to take anything away from Meier's early
mention of the Getty Center in Los Angeles. This project marks a turning point in
the career of Richard Meier. While the
project itself is now considered one of his
least successful works, it is considered unsuccessful due to circumstances beyond
Meier's control; committee politics, mediocre interior designers, neighborhood associations, and design by committee. The
Getty Center commission which Meier received in 1984 was the last large project
where he does not include sustainable technologies or strategies. This project is traditional Meier, while most projects after the
Center in 1998 Meier had turned his attention toward an integration of sustainable
technologies and passive techniques within
his buildings.
Though not the first building in which Meier
incorporates sustainable strategies into his
work, the Museum of Contemporary Art in
Barcelona (1995) is one of his early successful attempts. It is also important to note that
design partner Thomas Phifer had a pivotal
role in this project and should be credited
well.
The Museum of Contemporary Art in
Barcelona is a clean white box overflowing
with daylight. It is this emphasis on daylight and day-lighting strategies that make
this project stand apart from other Richard
Meier white box museums before it. The
lighting strategies inform all aspects of the
building; from the organization of gallery
spaces, fagade treatments, to a uniquely designed environmentally sensitive sunscreen
system that mediates the strong Mediterranean sun. Thomas Phifer explained in an
interview in 1996 regarding the museum
"We believe very strongly that art should be
viewed in daylight, so we tried to get natural light into just about every space". Though
this objective may appear ordinary, it is
rather ambitious for a museum project. And
this objective of bathing the interior of the
museum with natural light while simultaneously protecting the sensitive works of art
and preventing a strong glare, is what led to
an interesting system of louvers and sunscreens.
Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art
brackets bolted to the double mullions of the glass curtain wall. This system affords
visitors to view the exterior plaza while providing sufficient shade to the fagade
(Barreneche).
The Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art is, by no stretch of the imagination, a
sustainable building. However, it is a significant stride in Meier's evolution toward
sustainable intentions. The lighting strategies in this project do add to the overall elegance of the interior space, which is typical of almost any Meier work. The difference
in the Barcelona Museum is that techniques are also used to limit direct radiation from
heating the interior of the building. Significant effort and resources were expended to
control light and heat through both passive and active means.
Arguably most significant about the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art is the
way in which Richard Meier, along with partner Thomas Phifer, address heat gain issues. The strategies used are integrated seamlessly into both the process, and ultimately
the form of the building. The louver and sunscreen systems participate in a graceful
dialogue with the rest of the edifice. The elegant volumes of space inform the environmental control systems, and in turn, these systems are afforded the opportunity to inform the space. Much like the work of Norman Foster, Richard Meier has allowed the
control systems to contribute to the design of the building, without sacrificing his valued aesthetic intentions and architectural expression.
The next project we will address is the U.S. Courthouse and Federal Building in Phoenix, Arizona completed in January of 2000. This project marks another important step
in Richard Meier's metamorphosis toward the use of sustainable technologies within a
clear design expression. It is also interesting to note that the Phoenix courthouse is a
departure form Meier's typical white box aesthetic. This formal divergence is undoubtedly due, in part, to the large glass hall of civic proportions.
Being the primary formal gesture of the building, this indoor civic space was designed
as an intermediate experiential zone between the fully conditioned courtrooms and the
extreme temperatures of the southwestern Sonoran Desert. The hall or atrium, which
Psychometric Chart
egies are not overly expensive, high-technology, systems. They are for the most part,
passive. Meier incorporates the use of sunscreens, louvers, shading canopies, proper
orientation, and a rather simple adiabatic
evaporative cooling technique. Yet, all of
these elements together, provide for an effective response to the severe desert conditions. And not only do they offer effective
environmental control, but they also inform
the overall design and the formal implication of the project as well.
As we have seen Richard Meier has significantly adjusted his architectural position over
the course of his career. In his early work,
the Smith and Douglas houses, Meier was
focused on complicated, even esoteric, architectural objectives. He was an
archmodernist preoccupied with diagrammatic clarity, spatial intricacy, geometric volumes, and the complexity of light and
shadow. These interests produced some of
the twentieth century's finest architectural
works to be sure. However, in his later work,
Meier brings a new layer of significance to
his projects. The formal complexities mentioned that once characterized his porous
designs, are now further developed by climate-sensitive building strategies. Although
Richard Meier's buildings have evolved in
their design intentions, his work retains the identifiable style that makes his buildings
such sought-after collectibles for cities around the world with cultural aspirations
(Giovannini).
At the age of forty-nine, Richard Meier was the youngest ever recipient of architectures
highest honor, the Pritzker Prize. Only after achieving such an elevated position within
the discipline of architecture, did Meier evolve his design philosophy to involve sustainable technologies to further advance his work. As suggested early in this chapter, it
is the position of this thesis that Richard Meier is indicative of a much larger movement.
Meier's acknowledgement and advancement of sustainable technologies is representative of an entire discipline that once ignored such issues in favor of formal characteristics, esoteric symbolism , and stylistic intentions. Meier and his work, become important case studies in that they demonstrate that the landscape of the discipline has changed.
More is required of both architects and buildings today than was ten years ago. Richard
Meier continues to be successful not only because of his superior design abilities, but
because he has chosen to evolve with a discipline that continues to progress toward
environmental responsibility.
Chapter 5
The Emergence of Sustainable Practice in Superstructures
and materials, and similarly make extensive discharges into the environment, thus are
inherently un-green (Yeang). Because of this, it has been widely accepted within the
discipline of architecture that to make a "green" mega-structure would be too expensive
and too difficult. This complacent attitude has perpetuated, for decades, the construction of environmentally unfriendly buildings throughout the world. However, Kenneth
Yeang, a leading advocate of sustainable mega-structures, has argued for the better part
of two decades now, that high-density, intensive use structures should command a greater
part of our attention and expertise than smaller buildings which present fewer problems.
These huge structures in high-density urban environments contribute greatly to, not only
the massive energy consumption of cities, but also to many of the unhealthy qualities
associated with them. These skyscrapers are responsible for such a large percentage of
energy consumption and negative environmental health issues, that by addressing the
ecological problems associated with these mega-structures, there is the potential for
great positive impact.
Historically, seminal landmark skyscrapers such as the Mies van der Rohe's Seagram
Building or Skidmore, Owings and Merrill's Sears Tower have consistently subscribed
to the Modernist sealed, glass box paradigm. While the oil crisis of the 1970's sparked
a movement of sustainable research and development in small-scale architecture (mostly
single family residences), it failed to alter any patterns associated with high-density,
energy intensive, large-scale construction. Not until the last decade of the twentieth
century has the ecological impact of mega-structures and skyscraper been addressed.
Not only has this issue come to the forefront within technological research and academic realms, but it has manifested itself in the physical construction of a myriad of
high-profile, high-budget projects throughout the world. It is the position of this paper
that these recent widespread concerns with the environmental impact of mega-structures represent both a redirection within the discipline of architecture toward sustainability,
and are indicative of a larger cultural phenomenon associated with ecological concerns.
When addressing the ecological impact of mega-structures, it is not simply the issue of
energy conservation that is significant. There is a connectivity that must be addressed.
Energy conservation must work in tandem with considerations of minimizing construction waste, building with recycled materials, using renewable energy sources such as
solar power and wind to service the building, providing clean air and naturally ventilated interior works space for employees and occupants, and water conservation and
reuse. These factors, only in combination, provide for a holistic approach to environmentally sensitive design.
This trend associated with improving the environmental responsibility of the urban megastructure may be attributed to many factors. The three most apparent, and possibly most
fundamental, are the issues of (1) monetary savings, (2) the emergence of cultural concern for environmental issues, and (3) corporate public relations. The monetary savings
for large-scale buildings reducing energy consumption is obvious. Even a modest, largescale project with 300,000 square feet of interior space that requires perpetual conditioning, could save tens of thousand of dollars annually by reducing energy consumption only 10-20%. Also, savings will continue to increase as sustainable technologies
advance and become more efficient. This fact has proved to be effective encouragement for the owners of these projects to seek energy efficient technologies and strategies.
The issues of corporate-public relations and cultural concern for the environment are
quite closely connected. These two elements are less quantitative and less tangible than
are the statistical facts of high-energy consumption related to cost. In recent years significant attention has been focused on environmental and conservation issues within
our society. Corporate entities and government agencies mostly responsible for the
commission of large-scale projects are inevitably aware of this fact, and understand that
building ecologically friendly projects portrays a commitment to civic values and the
public welfare. Public opinion has proved to be a significant motivating force for corporate entities to be (or appear to be) more environmentally responsible.
There are a number of recent projects that have been influential in advancing the issues
of ecological responsibility in mega-structures. Many of them are not only on the cut-
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Norman Foster's Commerzbank Headquarters in Frankfurt begun in 1992 (not completed until the summer of 1997). These two
projects are indicative of the commitment
that Yeang and Foster have consistently
made to the research and implementation of
sustainable technologies in their respective
work. These two works were also the predecessors to many subsequent projects by a
myriad of different architects, and proved
that sustainable technologies could in fact
be implemented effectively in large-scale
buildings.
Yeang's Menara Mesiniaga Building represents a culmination of his early research on
bioclimatic design in tall buildings. The
design of this building grew of out of Yeang's
belief that research should be the foundation of design, and that contemporary architects have the opportunity to transform ar-
craft into a confident science. This project employ's a variety of strategies never before
fully experimented with in a large-scale building. One of the more revolutionary techniques used is Kenneth Yeang's idea of a vertical spiral-garden. This vertical garden is
situated in a staggered manner, rising vertically from the base, spiraling up the outer
fagade of the circular tower, allowing the plants to receive the maximum amount of
daylight, rainwater, and fresh air. The vegetation cools the building and provides the
occupants with a sense of connection to the outdoors and nature (Gissen, ed.).
Passive low-energy features are also incorporated into this project. All of the windows
on the east and west facades, that receive the most direct solar radiation, are recessed
into the structure and have external louvers to provide shading and reduce heat gain into
internal spaces. The north and south facades, which do not receive direct radiation, are
constructed of glazed curtain-walls that afford optimum views and provide opportunity
for natural ventilation. Also, most interior spaces, including all circulation space, lobbies and lavatory's, are naturally lit during the day and are naturally ventilated requiring
no mechanical conditioning eight to nine months a year.
Most significant about this project is how it addresses the possibilities of future technologies. When this building was being constructed in 1991, many of the technologies
routinely employed today, in 2003, were still in their infancy and thus, inefficient and
expensive. Acknowledging the fact that technologies and sustainable techniques would
improve, Yeang designed the Mesiniaga Tower to be able to easily adapt to these future
developments. One of the primary considerations taken for future strategies to reduce
energy consumption is a large roof structure erected to accommodate photo-voltaic panels when the technology became more efficient and economically beneficial. Also, the
glazed curtain wall on the north and south facades were constructed in a manner that
might facilitate the addition of transparent solar collecting panels in the future.
The Commerzbank in Frankfurt designed by Norman Foster and Partners is another
seminal project in the evolution of sustainable high-rise structures. This building begun
in 1992 is considered one of the world's first ecologically sensitive mega-structures.
Commerzbank,
Norman Foster and Partners, 1992.
Commerzbank: Plan.
Commerzbank: Section.
Every element within the Conde Nast Building was considered for its environmental
sensitivity, occupant health, and energy reduction strategies. The most publicized aspect of this building is its use of photovoltaic panels. The top eleven stories, on the
south and east fagades, of this 48 story
Tower, are glazed entirely of energy generating, photovoltaic panels. Photovoltaics are
carded to landfill. Much of the granite veneer on the north fagade was also excavated
form the site itself. Also, to limit the amount of costly, steel required for a structural
frame, steel columns were placed inside of the concrete core sheer walls. A steel hattruss at the top of the building reduces lateral deflection, limiting further the amount of
structural steel required within the building.
While this list of environmentally responsible design features in the Conde Nast Building are, most decidedly, numerous and noble in their intent, the actual energy savings
are moderate. This fact is not intended to disparage this project in any way. The Conde
Nast Building at Four Times Square is the most environmentally responsible high-rise
building to date. However, this is only further proof of the enormous commitment
required to one day produce a truly ecologically friendly mega-structure. This project is
an experiment and working case study for others to follow and improve upon. Hillary
Brown, an architect and managing editor of New York City's DepartmentofDesign and
ConstructionHigh PerformanceBuilding Guidelinescomments about the building that
"In is important that we, as a culture, be socially responsible, take risks, and educate
ourselves. The developers, architects, and all their consultants should take pride in this
achievement. They are setting new standards".
We have thus far considered only the technological achievements of the Conde Nast
building. It is important to note however, that this building is also a sophisticated design that responds well to its immediate surroundings and enhances the place in which it
resides. Four Times Square savors its disposition as a hybrid design. It coalesces the
crown and shaft of traditional skyscrapers while addressing the urban street-scape in a
way that seamlessly dissolves into the surrounding signage of Times Square. The Tower
combines a myriad of new-modernist elements, techno-constructivist imagery at the
top, curved walls, and a watery reflective shaft, with traditional elements such as recessed windows and granite cladding (Stephens). The Tower is formally eclectic yet
maintains a sense of balance and dignified presence. It is clear that the formal vocabulary of Four Times Square has been affected by its commitment to environmental strategies. And while it is not efficient enough to be considered a bioclimatic skyscraper in
Kenneth Yeang's definition of the term, it is a progression in that direction toward a new
architectural typology.
Along with exterior and formal design considerations, there is emphasis placed on the
quality of interior space. One of the primary concerns on the interior of the building
were natural lighting strategies. Although the proportions of the site, dictated the footprint of the building to some extent, the architects limited the depth of the floor plate as
much as possible by strategically stepping the structure back as much as possible to
allow natural light to penetrate deep in to the building.
Now that we have examined the significance of one of the world's most environmentally sensitive mega-structures, the Conde Nast Building at Four Times Square, let us
turn our attention to some other examples of projects and firms that are also directing
their attention toward these pursuits. These next examples we will see may not necessarily be as environmentally responsive as the Conde Nast Building, however, in their
collectiveness, they demonstrate an emerging trend or redirection in mega-structure
construction.
Skidmore, Owings and Merrill is one of the largest and oldest architecture firms in the
world. They are credited with pioneering the very idea of corporate architecture. SOM
is also responsible for some of the twentieth century's largest and most celebrated skyscrapers. Their work traditionally has been on the cutting-edge of structural innovations. SOM has consistently synthesized the disciplines of architecture and engineering
in their quest for technologically advanced designs. One example of SOM significant
works is the John Hancock Insurance Company Building in Chicago. The Hancock
Building uses an innovative exo-skeleton, cross-braced, structural frame as support,
instead of massive concrete shear walls that were typical at its time of construction.
This strategy allows the building to be very light. At only 29 pounds per square foot, the
Hancock Building was the lightest skyscraper in existence when it was completed in
1974.
Skidmore, Owings and Merrill's most recognized work is probably the Sears Tower,
also in Chicago. From the time of its construction in the late 1970's until 1999 it was
the tallest building in the world. The Sears
Tower advanced tube-structure technology
in skyscrapers. Tube structures are considered to be the most efficient designs in counteracting wind loads. The Sears Tower structure consists of nine tubes, each seventy-five
feet square. Much like the Hancock Building, this structure is very light. The tubestructure technology allows for minimal concrete shear wall mass at the core. Although
rising over 1450 feet high, the Tower weight
is just thirty-three pounds per square foot; a
Skidmore, Owings and Merrill's recent interests in sustainable technologies is not uncommon for a corporate firm. Actually, we
have chosen to discuss their work because
SOM is representative of many large international corporate architecture firms that
have directed their attention toward these
issues. However, corporate architecture
firms are not the only ones gravitating toward energy efficiency and sustainable technologies in there recent large-scale constructions. Many smaller, high-design firms that
are commissioned for large-scale projects are
also addressing these issues. One such firm
is Morphosis headed by architect Thom
Mayne.
Morphosis has traditionally been known predominantly for their avant-garde aesthetics
and theoretical paper-architecture. However,
recently their work has begun to address issues of energy efficiency through sustainable
technologies. One project in particular
where this is evident is the new Federal Office Building in San Francisco. Currently
under construction and scheduled for
completion in 2005, this project will be the
most energy efficient, large building in the
city of San Francisco. In this project, Morphosis has successfully synthesized their
trademark cutting edge design aesthetics
with sustainable technologies.
The primary efficiency strategy in this
project is the natural ventilation system.
Over seventy percent of the building will
have no mechanical conditioning whatsoever. A revolutionary energy simulation program, developed by Berkeley Lawrence
Labs, called EnergyPlus played a significant
role in the design process of this project.
Only because of this advanced software were
the architects and engineers of the project
able to design such an efficient passive system. This ventilation system will be operated by a high-tech building management
system that monitors interior temperature
and automatically opens and closes floor-
level vents. Breezes will be allowed to enter the building on the northwest fagade and
will be vented through the southwest corner. To help facilitate this system, the entire
building was designed around this ventilation strategy. Unlike most federal office
buildings, this project will have as few interior walls as possible and all offices that require walls for privacy, or for security reasons, are located at the center of the building, not the perimeter which is standard office building layout. This design will enable the natural ventilation to function uninhibited and unrestricted by interior partitions while also allowing natural light to
penetrate as deep into the structure as possible. Most noteworthy about this entire
ventilation system is that, for the most part,
it is a passive system. While it does make
use of complex monitors and sensors to control the intake and exhaust of air, most air
used to cool the structure is unconditioned,
outside air. To further reduce heat gain, the
ceilings are constructed of heavy-weight
ceiling slabs to absorb and store heat, then
dissipate it at night when the air is cooler
and there are fewer occupants.
Similar to many other recent large-scale sustainable projects, the new eighteen-story San
Francisco Federal Office Building will also
make use of a sky-garden. This feature will be notched into the eleventh through thirteen floors to provide, not only, a garden relaxation space for employees, but will also
contribute to the natural lighting and ventilation strategies.
Pre-construction energy efficiency tests run using the EnergyPlus software project that
this building will be fifty percent more efficient than other more typical, modest size
high-rise towers of its kind. The savings is projected to be more than eleven million
dollars over a fifteen year period. With an added construction cost of less than five
percent of total budget, economically, the system clearly pays for itself. This statistic is
said to have been one of the contributing factors in Morphosis being awarded this commission by the City of San Francisco.
Thom Mayne and Morphosis have clearly embraced sustainable technologies and practices in their work. The new U.S. Federal Building in San Francisco is a lucid example
of this. They have embraced this new dimension into their work without compromising
the bold design expression that made them famous. In our previous case studies of
corporate firms we saw that Skidmore, Owings and Merrill could be considered a representative of countless other corporate architecture firms that have directed their attention toward sustainable technologies. In a similar manner, Morphosis too may be considered a representative of any number of small, high-design firms that have found it
not only advantageous, but necessary to embrace such technologies that bring a new
depth to their architecture.
The previous case studies we have seen thus far are all fine examples of the changing
nature of architecture toward a concern for the environment. Although some of these
projects are more advanced in their techniques and technologies than others, all of these
works are linked through their similar intentions of energy efficiency and sustainable
practices. Also, it may be argued that through these buildings, and others like them, a
new architectural typology is emerging. The formal vocabulary of architecture is changing
through the synthesis of sustainable technologies and design expression. This is certainly more prevalent in some case studies than in others. However, it is certain that all
of these buildings have been formally influenced, in some way, by their use of environmental technologies, whatever they may be.
The formation of new typologies in architecture is usually a gradual occurrence, and
as we have seen through our case studies,
changes in established building typologies
like skyscrapers, will be a subtle, gradual
process as well. Sustainability in megastructures is still very much in its infancy.
However, as technologies improve, expectations will be raised, and this new formal
typology will continue to evolve in response.
One project that challenges all conventional
high-rise typology is Norman Foster's design for the new Swiss Re Headquarters in
London. The formal vocabulary of this design is clearly influenced by Foster's environmental concerns. This 40-story Tower,
scheduled for completion in 2004, is another
step in the sustainable evolution of high-rise
buildings. The radical conical form of the
Swiss Re Building defies all established
norms associated with the traditional skyscraper. The form of the structure was developed to fully maximize its aero-dynamic
efficiency; to reduce direct solar heat gain;
and to enhance the transparency of the facades. By making the form of the building
more aero-dynamic, Foster was able to limit
the amount of material and structure necessary for structural stability. Also, the unusual form will deflect air flow around the
building, not down toward the public plaza
below, affording a more pleasant civic space.
The energy efficiency of the Swill Re Headquarters project is, obviously, yet to be determined. Its environmental impact is projected to be substantially lower than other
buildings of its size. However, the significance of this project with regard to our discussion is its radical formal proposition. As
we discussed earlier in this chapter, Norman
Foster was one of the early proponents of
environmental responsibility in mega-structures. His Commerzbank Building in Frankfurt is an early example of this concern. The
formal vocabulary of the Commerzbank
project, however, is only minimally influenced by the environmental technologies
integrated into the building; and rightfully
Swiss Re Headquarters:
Environmental Strategies.
building based on sustainable technologies. Norman Foster said of the building "the
aim of creating an environmentally responsible building with a natural economy of form,
and a detailed understanding of the urban context, has been the only preoccupation of
this practice. The Swiss Re is radical socially, technically, spatially, and architecturally".
Chapter 6
Making an Argument
It may be argued that in recent years an unprecedented ecological awareness has taken
hold, not only within the discipline of architecture, but throughout our society as well.
No longer are we as a culture accepting of the long established traditions of buildings
holding dominion over nature at all cost and without consequence. Today there is concern with bringing mankind and all things manmade into a benign harmony with our
natural environment.
Architects can no longer be content with simply satisfying basic requirements of health,
safety and welfare in their buildings. More esoteric investigations into the poetics of
space, theoretical experimentation, or symbolic reference also are not enough. A new
layer of expertise and understanding is now required of our discipline. The pursuits of
design expression must now work in tandem with the advancement of sustainable technologies to achieve an architecture that responds in a positive and sensitive way to the
environment in which it resides. Sustainable issues have become a significant participatory, yet not dominant, element within architectural design. It is the position of this
thesis that there is a recent - and widespread - convergence of sustainable technologies
and design expression that is occurring and affecting the entire discipline of architecture. The logical synthesis of technology and design is fundamentally altering not only
what is built, but also how it is built. The physical implications of this convergence on
contemporary architecture are that it is creating a new formal vocabulary never seen
before. In many cases, a new typology is emerging.
While the change in process is also an integral part of this recent convergence of issues,
this thesis has focused primarily on identifying the physical architectural evidence associated with it. The physical manifestation of the synthesis of sustainable technologies
and design expression can be seen in a wide range of projects throughout the discipline
and is bound by no aesthetic or formal category.
Making an Argument
For decades, the pursuit of ecologically responsible architecture was relegated to the
periphery of the discipline. Since the commencement of the Modem movement a century ago, the world of high-design has been predominantly preoccupied with formal
expression. In spite of the shifting doctrines of movements such as Modem, Postmodem,
High-Modem, Deconstruction, etcetera, the emphasis has remained on formal vocabularies. Recently however, new concerns associated with the negative impact of architecture on both the environment, and the health of its occupants, have emerged and
found widespread appeal. These concerns have seemingly transcended all formal categorization, and are affecting architecture regardless of function, style, or theoretical
position. Whereas once Sustainability was relegated to its own category, today it has
become part of all categories.
Sustainability in the past was, arguably, a forced issue by those most committed to it.
Purposefully locating themselves outside the architectural mainstream, proponents of
sustainability took radical positions and pursued extreme solutions to environmental
problems. A disenchanted discipline, and an unconvinced public, refused to embrace
this movement. Today, however, environmental issues have become a relevant, participatory dynamic within architectural design. This is a departure from past sustainable
movements in that it does not attempt to deny architectural expression or hold dominion
over all other architecturally relevant issues.
By allowing sustainable technologies to both inform, and be informed by design expressions, a new vocabulary is emerging. This formal vocabulary is founded upon valid
environmental and cultural responsibilities, which again is a departure from past movements that were many times founded exclusively on symbolic references, esoteric theory
or formal semblance. Contemporary architecture has realized a balance between relevant architectural expression and its responsibility to nature.
It is important to acknowledge that these new ecological concerns within architecture
are a response to a growing cultural awareness toward the well-being of the natural
Making an Argument
natural non-renewable resources. And although in the past, they have been catego-
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IML
&Ib
successes.
Nicholas Grimshaw has continuously been
a leading advocate of sustainable technologies throughout his distinguished career.
One of his most influential projects is the
British Pavilion at the 1992 World Exposition in Seville, Spain. Although constructed
over ten years ago, it remains a paradigm of
environmental experimentation. This
project was instrumental in illustrating that
technological innovation could be more than
simply formal window dressing. The British Pavilion was also seminal in that it
proved that ecological concerns and hightech architectural expression are not mutually exclusive (Slessor 88).
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sustainability, but they certainly contributed to its advancement. For decades, Foster,
Grimshaw and the handful of others like them, were certainly the exception to the rule.
They were, most decidedly, ahead of the industry and correctly anticipated environmental concerns in architecture. Their work also now provides a plethora of case studies for
the rest of the discipline to learn from, expand on, and improve upon.
In contrast to Foster and Grimshaw there are countless architects who have, only recently, addressed ecological issues in their work. Many of these designers were already
well established, successful practitioners who, for one reason or another, found it necessary to embrace sustainable technologies. Within the context of this thesis it would be
unfeasible, and un-necessary, to attempt to document all that have recently directed
their attention to sustainable issues. Therefore, we have focused on one architect that
may be considered representative of numerous other recent converts.
Richard Meier achieved great success early in his career while establishing a signature
aesthetic. His work was renowned, and respected, throughout the world. Only then did
he redirect his practice toward sustainable issues. Because of this extraordinary shift in
position, we may consider Meier and his work exemplary of many others who have
recently addressed such concerns. In the past, Richard Meier has been best known for
his austere, pure-white forms and meticulous attention to architectural elements such as
diagrammatic clarity, spatial complexity, geometric volumes, and the intricacy of light
and shadow. Recently however, with his attention directed toward sustainability, a new
layer of complexity has been added to his design intentions. Without compromising his
signature design principles, he has incorporated environmental technologies into his
architecture in a way that allows this new dimension to inform the overall formal vocabulary. This transformation of formal expression is significant to our discussion in
that it clearly demonstrates how the synthesis of sustainable technologies with serious
design can, and is, fundamentally altering architectural form.
The Smith House in Darien, Connecticut (1967), and the Douglas House in Harbor
Springs, Michigan (1973), are two of Meier's seminal works that established him as a
Making an Argument
preeminent architectural figure of his generation. These two works are exemplar of
the archetypal Meier principles that made his
early work so celebrated; strict modernist
vocabulary, spatial complexity, diagrammatic clarity, and attention to light and
shadow. To contrast these two projects with
one of Richard Meier's more recent works,
the Phoenix Federal Courthouse Building
(1999), is extraordinarily revealing of his
evolving architectural intentions.
Smith House, Connecticut, 1967.
The Phoenix Federal Courthouse is a formal departure from Meier's typical whitebox vocabulary. More importantly than this
though, is that the sustainable technologies
and techniques utilized in the project are responsible for this departure. The grand semipublic atrium is the dominant feature of the
building that all else is designed around.
This glass hall is, conceptually, considered
a transitional space between the severe desert
environment of Phoenix, Arizona, and the
fully conditioned work spaces within the
building. Therefore, it is considered un-necessary to cool this space to the level that is
required for offices and courtrooms. Because of this, the atrium is cooled using the
adiabatic evaporation system. Adiabatic
evaporation occurs when water absorbs heat
energy form the surrounding environment
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101
ing interior conditioned space in buildings. Since the advent of the air-conditioner fifty
years ago, people have subscribed to the idea that office buildings need to be cooled to
sixty-eight degrees year round. This feeling was perpetuated by modernist doctrine that
advocated the proverbial sealed glass box. The Phoenix Courthouse however, is a departure from this position. The glass atrium transition space is expected to be reasonably comfortable, but only about twenty degrees cooler than outside temperature. That
means, that during summer months, when the temperature in Phoenix may reach 110
degrees, the atrium will be 90 degrees. For most of the year though, excluding the
exceedingly hot summer months, the atrium would be between 60-85 degrees. This was
considered acceptable for a transition space. This very idea represents an adjustment in
expectations of what is acceptable for an interior conditioned environment. Yet another
indication that our culture is becoming more cognizant of environmental issues and
willing to adjust behavioral patterns and expectations accordingly.
Another, unlikely, project to integrate sustainable technologies into the overall design is
Morphosis' Federal Building in San Francisco scheduled for completion in 2005. Like
Meier's Phoenix Courthouse, this project will challenge conventional expectations regarding interior conditioned space. Seventy percent of this building will have no mechanical conditioning at all. The entire project was designed utilizing a sophisticated
software program called EnergyPlus that simulates air flow and temperature throughout
the building. It was established that most of the building could be reasonably cooled to
between 60-75 degrees using only passive systems. This project is significant because
the formal vocabulary of the design was heavily influenced by the use of digital software in pursuit of sustainable intentions and low-energy consumption.
Richard Meier and Morphosis are representative of a specific segment of the discipline
of architecture that has recently acknowledged the importance of sustainable issues, and
begun incorporating them into their designs. However, when attempting to identify this
recent widespread convergence of sustainable technologies and design expression, it is
important to consider a wider cross-section of the industry.
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102
engage in high-tech research, they are advancing ecological design concerns through
the exploration of low-tech, passive means.
The foremost example of small-scale architecture that is heavily influenced by environmental concerns, is the work of Australian architect Glenn Murcutt. Although there
can be few architectural similarities drawn
between the massive, urban mega-structures
of SOM and the sensitive, rural interventions
of Glenn Murcutt, there are consistencies in
their intentions. SOM, Murcutt, and countless firms in-between of varying sizes and
categories, exhibit a commonality through
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103
Glenn Murcutt has, for decades now, addressed environmental concerns and used
these concerns to inform his architecture.
Environmental issues in his work achieve
such a level of integration with the overall
design expression, that it is difficult, if not
impossible, to distinguish which is which.
While maintaining rather strict modern,
minimal-rationalist principles, Murcutt's
work realizes a remarkable relationship to
the land and the environment. One of
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104
gence affords an overall quality of architecture. However, the way in which these passive environmental strategies are utilized is indicative of Murcutt's intentions, and expectations he has for his work. Much like Meier's Phoenix Federal Courthouse discussed earlier, Murcutt does not require that his houses be conditioned to a perfect 70
degrees year round. By passively cooling and naturally ventilating his projects, the
occupants must expect, and accept, a range of comfort. In the summer months, the
interior space may only be cooled to 80 degrees. This reality of expectations is an
important part of Murcutt's work. This acceptance of comfort conditions allows the
environmental strategies to be a participatory part of his designs, which in turn, affects
the formal vocabularies of the projects. If Murcutt's projects were mechanically conditioned in a more conventional manner, the sustainable strategies would be less important to the overall design and hence, the projects would evolve differently. This reality
of expectations is fundamental to passive cooling and ventilation strategies becoming
more ubiquitous within architecture. By overcoming preconceived notions of what comfort is and what is required of interior conditioned space, our society will begin to build
more environmentally efficient and friendly buildings of all scales.
The recent ubiquitous trend of mega-structures attempting to be more environmentally
responsible is one that cannot be ignored when addressing the convergence of design
expression and sustainability. As chronicled in chapter five of this thesis, most recent
mega-structures being built or currently in various stages of design, are utilizing environmental technologies. The reasons for this are threefold. One, the potential monetary
savings on reduced energy consumption for huge buildings is significant. Two, most
large projects are built either by corporate entities or government agencies, who find it
beneficial to be, or appear to be, environmentally responsible. And three - related to
reason two - is that our contemporary culture is more concerned with environmental
issues today than it was a decade ago. Society is beginning to dictate that architecture
be more responsive to both the environment and to the health of its occupants.
This redirection toward sustainable technologies in the mega-structure is fundamentally
changing the formal vocabulary of large-scale buildings. It may be argued that a new
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105
is fundamentally altering the formal vocabulary of high-rises. Yeang first utilized this
strategy in his Menara Mesiniaga Building
in 1992. Since then, this technique has been
mimicked in some buildings, and interpreted
slightly differently in others. However, in
all projects where some version of the vertical spiral-garden is utilized, a new formal
typology is emerging. Because this strategy
must be fully integrated into the physical
structure of a high-rise, it inevitably alters
the vocabulary.
CommerzBank Building: Ventilation Diagram.
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