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International update - March 2002

International update - March 2002

Helsinki high-rise incorporates “moving façade”


August 11, 2010

Helsinki high-rise incorporates “moving façade”

Helsinki, Finland’s latest high-rise building, the 18-story KONE Building, incorporates a transparent façade, exposing the building’s elevators.

“The idea was that because the client is an elevator company, we would have a ‘moving façade’ to the south using four elevators,” says Antti-Matti Siikala, project manager from Helsinki-based design architect Sarc Oy. The elevators run in a glass elevator shaft extending the whole height of the building, which is clad with a double-skin glass curtain wall to control heat gain and protect the building against wind and water pressure.

Other innovative building features include the use of colored concrete and screen-printed glass.

“The screen-printed glass is decorative as well as functional,” adds Siikala. “It takes as much as 50 percent of the solar energy away as it enters the building.”

Completed in May 2001, the building was constructed by the Skanska Oy, Helsinki, the Finland affiliate of Sweden-based contractor Skanska AB, and sister company of Skanska, Whitestone, N.Y.

 

Construction is expected to begin this summer on China Electronics Corp.’s new 1 million-sq.-ft., 19-story office tower in Beijing. DMR Architects, Maywood, N.J., is partnering with JAO Design International, Beijing, to design the $54 million building, which includes four levels of underground parking. This is DMR’s second major international project. In 1990, the firm designed the National Educational Technology Center, a 500-acre university in Kaduna, Nigeria. It plans to partner with JAO on future projects in Beijing, host of the Summer Olympics in 2008.

The first phase of a 7.4 million-sq.-ft. mixed-use development in Kaohsiung, Taiwan, will begin construction this spring. Designed by RTKL Associates, Baltimore, the project involves construction of an 11-story shopping center, called Dream Mall, incorporating retail, entertainment and an eight-story parking structure. Second and third phases of the project will add retail space, offices, a hotel and residential units across the street.

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