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.
EQUATOR TOWER in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia by REX
February 4th, 2014 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: REX
View of the PetronasTowers through external sun shade, Image Courtesy © REX
Architects: REX
Project: EQUATOR TOWER
Location: Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
Photography: Luxigon, REX.
CLIENT: Confidential
PROGRAM: 380-meter (1,230-foot), 80-story tower comprised of offices and related amenities, including auditoria, bar, banquet halls, cafeterias, executive clubs, gift shop, meeting rooms, prayer halls, restaurants, retail, and sky terraces.
AREA 173,000 m2 (1,860,000 sf)
CONSTRUCTION BUDGET: Confidential
STATUS: Limited competition, 2012; one of five winning entries, 2013
KEY PERSONNEL: Adam Chizmar, Danny Duong, Luis Gil, Alysen Hiller, Gabriel Jewell-Vitale, Roberto Otero, Se Yoon Park, Joshua Prince-Ramus, Yuan Tiauriman, Cristina Webb
EXECUTIVE ARCHITECT: DP
CONSULTANTS: ARUP, Barker Mohandas, DEGW, Front, Magnusson Klemencic,Martha Schwartz Partners.
View from Northwest Gateway, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
External sun shade deployed, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
View from typical office space, external sun shade deployed, Image Courtesy © REX
External sun shade retracted, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
View from typical office space, external sun shade retracted, Image Courtesy © REX
An efficient vertical transport scheme—employing double-decker elevator cabs and two intermediate sky lobbies—is combined with, Image Courtesy © REX
an efficient service riser scheme—facilitated by three intermediate mechanical floors—to create a slender structural core., Image Courtesy © REX
The core is ringed by 12m wide office plates on a 1.5m planning grid and layered 4.2m floor-to-floor (2.9m floor-to-ceiling). These parameters meet best practices for office flexibility, daylight penetration, and area efficiency (over 80%). , Image Courtesy © REX
The resulting office machine is clad in 3m-wide, mullion-free, triple-glazed IGUs with clear glass spanning floor to ceiling. Combined with dispersed—and therefore small—perimeter columns, the façade provides extraordinarily unobstructed views., Image Courtesy © REX
The FAR saved by the offices’ efficiency is added to the Observatory, Sky Lobbies, and Podium Lobby as “outriggers” of extra amenity. , Image Courtesy © REX
Located on the equator, the tower receives direct sunlight from all four sides, with similar north/south and east/west exposure. To maximize energy efficiency, four-sided solar shading is demanded., Image Courtesy © REX
In response, the tower is wrapped in a retractable, PTFE-coated, glass fiber-reinforced fabric sun shade with 85% opacity, which protects the offices’ unobstructed views from daylight and glare. The sun veil is silver on the outside to reject heat, black on the inside to enhance visual legibility of the cityscape, and segmented into 4.2m shingles to allow for air circulation and ease of retraction., Image Courtesy © REX
During the day, the sun shade is stretched between the outriggers and the mechanical floors on a tensile cable net, creating a high-performance, lyrical silhouette. If internal roller-shades are installed building-wide for individual control of glare, whole faces of the veil could be retracted when not directly exposed to the sun, or the veil removed entirely on overcast days. , Image Courtesy © REX
At dusk, the veil is retracted to the mechanical floors to reveal the elegant tower within (and to avoid the veil turning opaque at night). The daily transformations of the 380m tower will become a spectacle within Kuala Lumpur’s skyline., Image Courtesy © REX
Site plan, Image Courtesy © REX
Podium Level Lobby plan, Image Courtesy © REX
View of Podium Level and Level 1 Lobbies, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
Section zoom, Image Courtesy © REX
Sky Lobby levels, Image Courtesy © REX
Executive Club levels, Image Courtesy © REX
Typical open office plan, Image Courtesy © REX
Typical private office plan ,Image Courtesy © REX
View from Northwest Gateway ,Image Courtesy © REX
View from Northwest Gateway ,Image Courtesy © REX
Typical private office plan ,Image Courtesy © REX
Typical open office plan, Image Courtesy © REX
Executive Club levels, Image Courtesy © REX
Sky Lobby levels, Image Courtesy © REX
Section zoom, Image Courtesy © REX
View of Podium Level and Level 1 Lobbies, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
Podium Level Lobby plan, Image Courtesy © REX
Site plan, Image Courtesy © REX
At dusk, the veil is retracted to the mechanical floors to reveal the elegant tower within (and to avoid the veil turning opaque at night). The daily transformations of the 380m tower will become a spectacle within Kuala Lumpur’s skyline., Image Courtesy © REX
During the day, the sun shade is stretched between the outriggers and the mechanical floors on a tensile cable net, creating a high-performance, lyrical silhouette. If internal roller-shades are installed building-wide for individual control of glare, whole faces of the veil could be retracted when not directly exposed to the sun, or the veil removed entirely on overcast days. , Image Courtesy © REX
In response, the tower is wrapped in a retractable, PTFE-coated, glass fiber-reinforced fabric sun shade with 85% opacity, which protects the offices’ unobstructed views from daylight and glare. The sun veil is silver on the outside to reject heat, black on the inside to enhance visual legibility of the cityscape, and segmented into 4.2m shingles to allow for air circulation and ease of retraction., Image Courtesy © REX
Located on the equator, the tower receives direct sunlight from all four sides, with similar north/south and east/west exposure. To maximize energy efficiency, four-sided solar shading is demanded., Image Courtesy © REX
The FAR saved by the offices’ efficiency is added to the Observatory, Sky Lobbies, and Podium Lobby as “outriggers” of extra amenity. , Image Courtesy © REX
The resulting office machine is clad in 3m-wide, mullion-free, triple-glazed IGUs with clear glass spanning floor to ceiling. Combined with dispersed—and therefore small—perimeter columns, the façade provides extraordinarily unobstructed views., Image Courtesy © REX
The core is ringed by 12m wide office plates on a 1.5m planning grid and layered 4.2m floor-to-floor (2.9m floor-to-ceiling). These parameters meet best practices for office flexibility, daylight penetration, and area efficiency (over 80%). , Image Courtesy © REX
an efficient service riser scheme—facilitated by three intermediate mechanical floors—to create a slender structural core., Image Courtesy © REX
An efficient vertical transport scheme—employing double-decker elevator cabs and two intermediate sky lobbies—is combined with, Image Courtesy © REX
View from typical office space, external sun shade retracted, Image Courtesy © REX
External sun shade retracted, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
View from typical office space, external sun shade deployed, Image Courtesy © REX
External sun shade deployed, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
View from Northwest Gateway, Image Courtesy © Luxigon
View of the PetronasTowers through external sun shade, Image Courtesy © REX
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Tags: Kuala Lumpur , Malaysia
Category: Tower
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