Graduation Project Report 2
Graduation Project Report 2
Graduation Project Report 2
Graduation Project
2020-2021
GREEN ACADEMY
HELWAN FACULTY
UNIVERSITY OF FINE
ARTS
Supervised by:
Prof. Yasser Elsayed
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Table of Contents Green Academy
1 Introduction ................................................................................................................................5
1.1 Purpose ..................................................................................................................................6
1. 2. Demographics and statistics that supports your selection ..............................................6
1.3. Scope .....................................................................................................................................6
2 Site Selection.............................................................................................................................7
2.1 The selected site (s) Location ................................................................................................7
2.2 SWOT Analysis for the sites ...................................................................................................9
2.3 SWOT analysis outcomes.......................................................................................................9
3 Site Analysis...............................................................................................................................10
Physical conditions (environmental & built environment)............................................................10
4. Precedents (Similar projects local and international) ..............................................................13
4.1. Project One: Title ..................................................................................................................13
4.1.1. Project Name: .....................................................................................................................13
4.1.2. Location: Country/City.........................................................................................................13
4.1.3. Architect: .............................................................................................................................13
4. Description of Project (Include architectural drawings and images) ..................................16
5. Advantages: (your analysis + original reference analysis)..................................................17
6. Disadvantages: (your analysis + original reference analysis) ............................................
4.2.Project Two: Title...................................................................................................................
4.2.1. Project Name: .....................................................................................................................
4.2.2. Location: Country/City.........................................................................................................
4.2.3. Architect: .............................................................................................................................
4. Description of Project (Include architectural drawings and images) ..................................
5. Advantages: (your analysis + original reference analysis)...............................................
6. Disadvantages: (your analysis + original reference analysis) ............................................
4.3. Project Three: Title................................................................................................................
4.3.1. Project Name: .....................................................................................................................
4.3.2. Location: Country/City.........................................................................................................
4.3.3. Architect: .............................................................................................................................
4. Description of Project (Include architectural drawings and images) ..................................
5. Advantages: (your analysis + original reference analysis).................................................
6. Disadvantages: (your analysis + original reference analysis) ............................................
5. Space Program and Zoning .....................................................................................................
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Table of Contents 3
Table of figures Green Academy
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Table of Contents 4
El Galal Plateau
1.Introduction
Egypt’s construction sector is currently ranked second in the MENA region, coming slightly behind the
UAE, According to an article by GlobalData, a data and analytics company. This came as a result of the
efforts made by the state in completing national projects from development of roads and infrastructure, through
the establishment of new cities (the new administrative capital, the new Galala, etc.) up to international projects
such as the Grand Egyptian Museum, which is being built to be the largest museum in the world of monuments.
With the increasing growth in the construction sector, greenhouse gases and carbon dioxide emissions
increase, which causes great harm to the environment. Cairo being the most polluted capital in the Middle
East, and according to the World Health Organization , the second most polluted large city in the world in 2018.
Furthermore, Egypt like many other several developing countries is facing a series of threats related to limited
access to natural resources in relation to the population size and economic growth and energy poverty.
Therefore, the Egyptian state must move towards improving energy efficiency in buildings and
addressing greenhouse gas emissions. This is what is known as GREEN ARCHITECTURE.
Green architecture, or green design, is an approach to building that minimizes the harmful effects of
construction projects on human health and the environment. The "green" architect or designer attempts to
safeguard air, water, and earth by choosing eco-friendly building materials and construction practices.
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1.1.Purpose
The main purpose of the Green Academy is to
establish a center dedicated to the study of environment
and sustainability especially in the fields of renewable
energy and reuse and treatment of waste in Egypt, in
which students and professionals are trained and
helped to become experts in this sector. To serve as an
educational center that represents the reference in
research, training and development of sustainable
specialties. This project will be the beginning of the
future of green architecture in Egypt
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Fig.3: Global CO2 Emissions by Sectors
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1.3. Scope
The ambition of the Green Academy is to become a center for training and teaching the principles of
sustainable architecture in an effort to spread that culture throughout Egypt. The project aims to become an
example of a new urbanization with a heavy focus on sustainability. In addition to building functionality and
visual appeal, it encourages the promotion of sustainable design, renewable energies, and new green
building materials. The project includes many components (research institute - school - exhibition halls -
office spaces for startups - a small museum focused on ideas of sustainability and the environment)in
addition to open spaces for students, researchers, children, families and the general public. As each of
these components has an impact and a role in developing ideas about sustainability.
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2 .Site Selection
Site
Fig.4:site location
Source: Student
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2.2. Accessibility
ROAD TO EL GALALA
A- BY CAR
- From Cairo
Ain El Sokhna Rd/Cairo - El Ain El
Sokhna/Hurghada – Cairo
(164KM around 1hr 49 min)
- From New Capital
Ain El Sokhna Rd/Cairo - El Ain El
Sokhna/Hurghada – Cairo
(136KM around 1hr 28 min)
B- BY PLANE
The nearest airport to Galala is in the
New Capital, 123 km away
C- BY TRAIN
In the near future, the Monorail of the
Administrative Capital, which
connects the New Capital and the 6
October city through Cairo, will be
operated. It is the nearest train
station to the new city of Galala.
Fig.7:Accessibility
Source: Student
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2.3. SWOT Analysis for the site
Strengths Weakness
Opportunities
SW Threats
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3 Site Analysis
Physical conditions (environmental & built environment)
Climate Analysis
Temperature Range
Legend
The highest temperature that can
be reached is 40° in June, and
the lowest temperature can be
reached 5° in December
Legend
Radiation Range
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Topography of New Galala City
contour lines
Fig .11Site contour lines Fig .12 Topography of New Galala City
Source : student Source: Integrating magnetic and stratigraphic data
todelineate the subsurface features in and
aroundnew Galala City, Northern Galala Plateau,
Egypt , report
The new City of Galala is located on the highest mount plateau in the Red Sea area between Ain
Sokhna and Zafarana. The plateau sits over 650 meters above sea level at its highest elevation.
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Land Use
Residential Services
Educational Touristic
Medical
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4. Precedents (Similar projects local and international)
Architecture : COBE
The science center in Lund, Sweden, combines exhibition hall, gallery, workshops, museum
shop, restaurant, offices and an auditorium. The main purpose of the Science Center is to
promote general interest in natural science and research in an engaging and playful way and to
showcase existing and future technologies supporting sustainable and climate-friendly solutions.
The Science Center will be constructed in wood with a roof covered entirely in solar cells, which
generate enough electricity to cover the museum’s needs. Organized around a green circular
science park, the Science Center both explores and showcases the interconnected dependencies
between inside and outside – between building and nature.
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Location
The Science Center is located at the very heart of Placing the planned green connection at the center
Science Village Scandinavia along a central green of the museum invites the public inside.
axis connecting parks to the north and the south.
All science is rooted in understanding nature. At the Science Center, nature has a central place in the middle
of the building in form of a public science park, where natural science can be experienced and showcased in
a scale of 1:1. Placing the planned green connection at the center of the museum invites the public inside
the building and helps dissolve the boundary between inside and outside.
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Ambitions for the design of the museum have been sky-high, and we feel that we have succeeded in
designing a unique and inviting building, whose open atrium and concave roof lend it a dramatic and elegant
profile that stands out and offers novel and innovative ways of using a museum
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Architectural drawings
1-Entrance
2- Public park
5 3- XS – Hall
4
4- Auditorium
6 5 – Restaurant
7 2 6- Office
A A 7- MPU
1
3
A A
1- Solar panels
2- Roof terrace
1
A 2 A
Roof Plan
Fig .18 Plans
Source : https://www.cobe.dk/idea/sciencecenter
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Architectural drawings
5
4 4
3 2 1
Main Elevation
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Advantages of function distribution
- All public functions are placed on the building’s ground floor to promote an active and open atmosphere.
- The design creates visual contact between inside and outside and extends the exhibition into the public
space at the center of the building.
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Fig .23 Uses Of Atrium
Source : https://www.cobe.dk/idea/sciencecenter
The large, round atrium will be an open, inviting and flexible urban space, where a vast variety of
different activities and functions can take place. In this way, the exhibitions will become visible and
accessible for everyone – even before entering the museum.
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Sustainability
The curved roof is covered by a 1,600-m² energy park producing up to 1.6 million kWh a year: Enough to cover the
building’s energy use and keep it CO2 neutral. The roof also serves as a rooftop patio and viewing platform.
Timber not only absorbs and stores CO₂ when produced, making it one of the
only building materials with a negative carbon footprint. It also has a proven
list of other positive performative abilities when measured on its impact on Fig .26 wooden structure
construction time, reuse, indoor climate and many other aspects. Source : https://www.cobe.dk/idea/sciencecenter
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4.2. CopenHill ,Copenhagen ,Denmark
Completed in 2017 by Bjarke Ingels Group, CopenHill is a 41,000m2 waste-to-energy plant with
an urban recreation center and environmental education hub. The building, which is now an
architectural landmark, embodies the concept of sustainability aligning with Copenhagen’s goal of
becoming the world’s first carbon-neutral city by 2025.
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CopenHill is imagined as a public infrastructure with social side-effects from day one. CopenHill new
waste incineration facilities integrate the latest technologies in waste treatment and energy
production. Due to its location on the industrial waterfront of Amager , where raw industrial facilities
have become the site for extreme sports from wakeboarding to go-kart racing , the new power plant
adds skiing , hiking and rock climbing.
– BIG Architects
The internal volumes of the new waste to energy We propose a new breed of waste to energy The building is gently wrapped
plant have been determined by engineering and plant , one that is economically , environmentally, with a continuous façade made
technical criteria . Due to sheer size and and socially profitable. Instead of considering the out of stacked aluminum bricks.
requirements for precise positioning , the primary building as an isolated architecture object , we The openings between the bricks
structure of the building is to be integrated with consider the assignment to design a façade as are letting cascades of daylight
the machinery an opportunity for the local context. into the deep process hall and
the administration space.
We propose to turn the roof of the new Amager Access to the ski paths is through an elevator
Resource into an artificial ski slope for the adjacent to the smokestack. The elevator has a
citizens of Copenhagen , where it will be possible glass wall facing the interior of the plant .
to ski all year round .
The roof is not only going to function as a ski slope , but like a real
mountain with a green forest areas , hike trail , climbing walls and maybe
even a mountain bike rail . On top of the slope there will be a viewing
plateau and a little café .
Fig .31 Form Generation
Source : https://big.dk/#projects-arc
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Schematic of Waste-to-Energy plant
Waste to energy uses trash as a fuel for generating power , just as other power plants use coal , oil , or natural gas . The burning fuel
heats water into steam that drives a turbine to create electricity. The process can reduce a community’s landfill volume by up to 90 % ,
and prevent one ton of CO2 release for every ton of waste bumed
Fig .33 The interior hall of the factory Fig .34 Material Process
Source : https://eumiesaward.com/work/4819 Source : https://eumiesaward.com/work/4819
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Architectural drawings
A A
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CopenHill
- CopenHill replaces a neighboring waste-incineration plant that has produced district heat and electricity for 45 years.
- It is being constructed by Amager Resource Center (ARC), which is owned by five Danish municipalities. The combined
heat and power plant will produce 25 per cent more energy than the plant it replaces, so 3 kilos of incinerated waste
will light a bulb for five hours instead of four
- It is being constructed by Amager Resource Center (ARC), which is owned by five Danish municipalities. The combined
heat and power plant will produce 25 per cent more energy than the plant it replaces, so 3 kilos of incinerated waste
will light a bulb for five hours instead of four
- CopenHill is designed to utilize 100 per cent energy content of the waste. It will burn garbage from more than 500,000
residents and 46,000 companies in the greater Copenhagen area.
- It is expected to treat around 400,000 tons of waste annually to supply a minimum of 50,000 Copenhagen homes with
electricity and 120,000 households with district heating. And because it’s close to the city, it will provide hot water to
160,000 homes
- CopenHill will also produce recycled materials (Figure 6). The plant will reuse 90 per cent of Copenhagen’s metal
waste, recover 100 million liters of spare water through flue gas condensation, and reuse 100,000 tons of bottom ash
as road material.
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