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By Barbara Knecht and Sara Hart
Space planning and building management
are factors that can support or thwart the effectiveness of
natural ventilation systems. The spatial flexibility of a
large office floor, typical of so much office construction
in the U.S. that can be reconfigured constantly for ever-changing
user needs, is simply not conducive to the effective employment
of user-controlled natural ventilation. The interiors of these
floors will benefit less, if at all, from naturally ventilated
skins. If you are 50 feet away from an operable window,
you wont feel much of its effect, observed Bisel.
Some enlightened companies reverse the typical office
layout and place open-plan offices at the perimeter and private
ones at the interior. But those interior offices will
not benefit from open windows on the perimeter. Narrow floor
plates, as seen in the RWE Tower and CYTS Plaza, lead to smaller
units of space in which user consensus over thermal comfort
will be easier to attain, and the smaller units of space can
be more easily zoned and coordinated with mechanical systems
for energy management.
McLauglin points out that natural ventilation
is most successful when the entire building has an integrated
design for energy management, most notably in the building
details that reduce the overall heat gain in a building. At
RWE, for example, the cavity blinds act as a shading device
to prevent solar gain; the air circulation in the cavity removes
the warm air that the blinds absorb before it can reradiate
to the interior. Increasing the opportunities for introducing
natural ventilation into nonresidential high-rise construction
will continue to face design complications, but the challenges
are well worth it for the sharp rise in human comfort and
the potential for significant energy savings.
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CYTS
Plaza in Beijing
Designed by von Gerkan, Marg and Partners
and Arup Hong Kong, the 22-story tower (scheduled
to be completed in December) will have a vertical
band of louvers in the exterior facade covered
by a side-hinged panel on the interior facade,
which individual users can open and close
for fresh air.
Renderings: Courtesy Von Gerkan, Marg and
Partners |
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Endless growing season
The newly created Nolen Greenhouses for
Living Collections at the New York Botanical Garden in the
Bronx arguably provide the most sophisticated facility for
growing plants in the U.S. Designed by New Yorkbased
Mitchell/Giurgola Architects (with Joseph R. Loring &
Associates, Severud Associates, and Langan Engineering and
Environmental Services), the greenhouses represent a complex
synthesis of high and low technologies, in order for hundreds
of thousands of plants to thrive and propagate under an acre
of glass.
The greatest challenge was to retain
and enhance the unique natural site conditions of this area
of the Botanical Gardenrock outcroppings, beautiful
specimen trees, and lawns, while satisfying the strict solar
orientation requirement of the greenhouses, and providing
convenient and logical visitor and service access, explains
Mitchell/Giurgola partner James R. Braddock, AIA. Also,
by establishing an appropriate architectural expression for
the headhouse [administration and visitors center], orchestrating
its massing, and creating a counterpoint between the glass
volumes of the greenhouses and the solid volumes of the headhouse,
our goal was to make the entire complex more than just an
efficient solution to a series of technical problems.
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