Sumit Singhal Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.
London Aquatic Centre in London, UK by Zaha Hadid Architects
The architectural concept of the London Aquatic Centre is inspired by the fluid geometry of water in motion, creating spaces and a surrounding environment in sympathy with the river landscape of the Olympic Park. An undulating roof sweeps up from the ground as a wave – enclosing the pools of the Centre with its unifying gesture of fluidity, whilst also describing the volume of the swimming and diving pools.
PROGRAM: Aquatics Centre for 2012 Summer Olympics and future use
CLIENT: Olympic Delivery Authority
Project Director: Jim Heverin
Project Architect: Glenn Moorley, Sara Klomps
Project Team [competition]: Saffet Kaya Bekiroglu, Agnes Koltay, Feng Chen, Gemma Douglas, Kakakrai Suthadarat, Karim Muallem, Marco Vanucci, Mariana Ibanez, Sujit Nair
Project Team: Alex Bilton, Alex Marcoulides, Barbara Bochnak, Carlos Garijo, Clay Shorthall, Ertu Erbay, George King, Giorgia Cannici, Hannes Schafelner, Hee Seung Lee, Kasia Townend, Nannette Jackowski, Nicolas dalewitch, Seth Handley, Thomas Soo, Tom Locke, Torsten Broeder, Tristan Job, Yamac Korfali, Yeena Yoon
Photographer: Hélène Binet
Consultants
Sports Architects: S+P Architects (London)
Structural engineer: Ove Arup & Partners (London, Newcastle)
Services: Ove Arup & Partners (London)
Fire safety: Arup Fire (London)
Acoustics: Arup Acoustics (London)
Façade Engineers: Robert-Jan Van Santen Associates (Lille)
Olympic: Basement 3,725 m2, Ground Floor 15,402 m2, First Floor 16,387 m2, Seating Area 7,352 m2
Footprint Area
Legacy: 15,950 m2
Olympic: 21,897 m2
London Aquatic Centre
The London Aquatic Centre is designed to have the flexibility to accommodate the size and capacity of the London 2012 Olympic Games whilst also providing the optimum size and capacity for use in Legacy mode after the 2012 Games.
London Aquatic Centre
Site Context
The London Aquatic Centre is situated within the Olympic Park Masterplan. The site is positioned on the south eastern edge of the Olympic Park with direct proximities to Stratford. The new pedestrian access from the east-west bridge called the Stratford City Bridge which links the Stratford City development with the Olympic Park will cross over the LAC. This will provide a very visible frontage for the LAC along the bridge. Several smaller pedestrian bridges will connect the site to the Olympic Park over the existing canal.
London Aquatic Centre
The Aquatic Centre addresses within its design the main public realm spaces implicit within the Olympic Park and Stratford City planning. These are primarily the east-west connection of the Stratford City Bridge and continuation of the Olympic Park space alongside the canal.
Image Courtesy Helen Binet
Layout
The Aquatic Centre is planned on an orthogonal axis perpendicular to the Stratford City Bridge. Along this axis are laid out the three pools. The training pool is located under the bridge whilst the competition and diving pools are within a large volumetric pool hall. The overall strategy is to frame the base of the pool hall as a podium by surrounding it and connecting it into the bridge.
Image Courtesy Helen Binet
This podium element allows for the containment of a variety of differentiated and cellular programmatic elements into a single architectural volume which is seen to be completely assimilated with the bridge and the landscape. From the bridge level the podium emerges from underneath the bridge to cascades around the pool hall to the lower level of the canal side level
Image Courtesy Helen Binet
The pool hall is expressed above the podium level by a large roof which is arching along the same axis as the pools. Its form is generated by the sightlines for the spectators during the Olympic mode. Double-curvature geometry has been used to create a structure of parabolic arches that create the unique characteristics of the roof. The roof undulates to differentiate an internal visual separation inside the pool hall between the competition pool volume and the diving pool volume. The roof projects beyond the base legacy pool hall envelope to extend the roof covering to the external areas of the cascades and the bridge entrance. The roof projection over the bridge entrance announces the London Aquatic Centre’s presence from the approach from either Stratford City or the Olympic Park. Structurally the roof is grounded at 3 primary positions. Otherwise the opening between the roof and the podium is in-filled with a glass façade.
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
London Aquatic Center - (c) Hufton + Crow
Image Courtesy Helen Binet
Image Courtesy Helen Binet
Image Courtesy Helen Binet
London Aquatic Centre
London Aquatic Centre
London Aquatic Centre
Legacy Mode
Legacy Mode
Legacy Mode
Legacy Mode
Legacy View
Floating Roof Form Junction with Podium
London Aquatics Centre Surface Contours
London Aquatics Centre Graphic
London Aquatic Center Videos:
Uploaded by LaurieHanna2012. A quick look around the inside of the impressive London 2012 Olympics Aquatics Centre. Filmed on 27 July 2011, marking one year until the beginning of the London 2012 Games. The Aquatics Centre will hold 17,500 spectators during the Games and was designed by Zaha Hadid.
Uploaded by darjole – An animation of the London Aquatics Center.
Uploaded by woodgnomology – Zaha Hadid’s uniquely sculpural diving boards for the London Olympics 2012 Aquatics Centre.
This entry was posted
on Wednesday, March 30th, 2011 at 9:20 am.
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