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.
Pavilion DIT [Department of Information Technology] in Moscow, Russia by Architecture bureau WALL
February 21st, 2017 by Sumit Singhal
Article source: Architecture bureau WALL
LOCATION
Pavilion of Moscow Information Technology Department is located in VDNH, at the intersection of Kolcevaya road and Serenevaya alley east of the main Alley of VDNH. Pavilion construction continues development concept of the territory “Park Znaniy” in the context of a comprehensive upgrade VDNH landscape.
MATRIX – conceptual carcass Information Technology pavilion, which forms the planning structure of exhibition space and thematic areas, visual and tactile image of the building.
The pavilion is a three-part structure with flexible identification 3 thematic areas: exposition area, business center and kid’s area connected the central communication space. Plastic complexity interprets the development morphotype of VDNH territory, forming substance of three separate volumes.
Ledged thematic areas structure creates open spaces for flexible applying in the summer season [open exhibitions, lectures, workshops, kid’s activities]. Open & closed spaces system generates the model of urban organism, united by a common surface – SMART FLOOR.
Smart floor creates new algorithms spaces applying, promotes thematic flexibility and variability, due to a permanent allocation of the connection points on the entire plane. Light navigation system, engineering systems, electrical, lighting and heating are implanted into a single plate.
On a visual level, the object manifests anonymity at the expense monolithic solutions the outer shell to the local implantation of light apertures. Light openings in the body of the building are accentuated attention to spatial landmark events and impressions: entrance hall, a landmark exposition area exhibit, kid’s center and logistics. Three deaf volume identifying three large openings designating and fixing the spatial location of the building.
The outer skin has its own identity due to concrete slab surface sizes 2000×1000 with plastic revealed pattern formalizing the aesthetics of the parent. Such plastics continue in the open space of the yard entrance group.
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