flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Innovative engineering behind BIG’s Vancouver Tower

Innovative engineering behind BIG’s Vancouver Tower

Buro Happold’s structural design supports the top-heavy, complex building in a high seismic zone; engineers are using BIM technology to design a concrete structure with post-tensioned walls.


By By BD+C Staff | April 23, 2012
Buro Happold designed a concrete core with post-tensioned walls, which can prote
Buro Happold designed a concrete core with post-tensioned walls, which can protect against damage in case of an earthquake and a

Multi-disciplinary engineering firm Buro Happold is providing structural engineering services for the Beach and Howe mixed-use tower in Vancouver. Buro Happold is design engineer, working in collaboration with local engineer of record, Glotman Simpson.

The structure meets the challenge of stabilizing a tall building whose mass is at its top – and making it safe in a high seismic zone. The 49-story building, designed by BIG-Bjarke Ingels Group, combines 653,890-sf of residential, retail, and commercial space in an urban complex at the entrance to the Granville Street Bridge.

Typically, the mass of a building is at its base. In response to the constricted urban site, the mass of the Beach and Howe tower is inverted. The tower’s small triangular base curves away from the bridge to allow light and air to enter lower apartments. As it rises, the building’s shape transforms into larger, rectangular floorplates that culminate in a square top. The designers describe the tower’s shape “as a curtain being drawn aside, welcoming people as they enter the city from the bridge.”

Buro Happold designed a concrete core with post-tensioned walls, which can protect against damage in case of an earthquake and also improve performance. This creative solution meets the tower’s structural and seismic requirements. BD+C

Related Stories

Architects | Nov 18, 2016

A Frank Lloyd Wright building in Montana will soon be demolished, or will it?

The building is one of only three Frank Lloyd Wright-designed buildings in the state.

Architects | Nov 11, 2016

Six finalists selected for London’s Illuminated River competition

The competition is searching for the best design for lighting the bridges of central London.

Healthcare Facilities | Nov 10, 2016

Prescription for success: Managing technology in the design of healthcare facilities

While the benefits of intelligently deployed technology are abundantly clear to both designers and healthcare end-users, it’s no simple task to manage the integration of technology into a building program.

Industry Research | Nov 4, 2016

New survey exposes achievement gap between men and women designers

Female architects still feel disadvantaged when it comes to career advancement. 

Architects | Nov 2, 2016

NCARB launches ARE 5.0

The newest version of the exam required for an architecture license, ARE 5.0, launched on Nov. 1.

Architects | Oct 24, 2016

Winners of the 2016 AAP American Architecture Prize announced

The AAP recognizes the most outstanding architecture worldwide across three disciplines: architecture, interior design, and landscape architecture.

Architects | Oct 21, 2016

A process of analysis and synthesis gives architects and designers the information they need to create

Sometimes people look only for the simple answer and don’t understand that there is a calculated process to get there, writes HDR’s Lynn Mignola.

Architects | Oct 21, 2016

The AIA Innovation Award Recipients have been selected

The program honors projects that highlight collaboration between design and construction teams to create better process efficiencies and overall costs savings.

Architects | Oct 21, 2016

NASA Orbit Pavilion to debut at The Huntington Library at the end of October

The pavilion uses sound to represent the movement of the International Space Station and 19 earth satellites.

Higher Education | Oct 20, 2016

Designing innovative campuses for tomorrow's students

Planning for places that foster effective innovation is still an emerging process, but the constant pressure on universities to do so continues from two of their key institutional constituencies—students and employers, writes Perkins+Will's Ken Higa and Josh Vel.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Warehouses

California bill would limit where distribution centers can be built

A bill that passed the California legislature would limit where distribution centers can be located and impose other rules aimed at reducing air pollution and traffic. Assembly Bill 98 would tighten building standards for new warehouses and ban heavy diesel truck traffic next to sensitive sites including homes, schools, parks and nursing homes.




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021