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#speirs is from district 2
balladoficarus · 23 days
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the capitol would've loved speirs in the hunger games
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architectnews · 4 years
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Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site
UK architecture studio Zaha Hadid Architects has unveiled its design for a sinuous, glass, 36-storey skyscraper, which will be built in Hong Kong at 2 Murray Road on what is reportedly the world's most expensive plot.
The 36-storey skyscraper in Hong Kong's central business district will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower by IM Pei, and in close proximity to the HSBC building by Foster + Partners.
It will replace a multistorey car park that was purchased by developer Henderson Land for HK$23.3 billion ($3 billion) in 2017, making it the world's most expensive site according to numerous news outlets.
Top: 2 Murray Road skyscraper in Hong Kong. Above: the skyscraper (centre) will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower (right)
Zaha Hadid Architects' skyscraper will have a glass facade made from a series of curved segments that rise to form two sets of open-air balconies filled with trees.
Directly below the higher balcony, which is located around two-thirds of the way up the skyscraper, will be a planted sky garden. This space will also house a running track.
At the top of the skyscraper, an enclosed banqueting hall will have views across the city.
According to the studio, the building's form was based on the shape of a bud from the Bauhinia plant, which was previously grown near the site and is the flower at the centre of the city's flag.
The skyscraper will have tree-filled balconies and an enclosed sky garden
"The design reinterprets the structural forms and layering of a Bauhinia bud about to blossom," said the studio.
"Known as the Hong Kong orchid tree, the Bauhinia x blakeana was first propagated in the city's botanic gardens above the Murray Road site and its flowering bud features on Hong Kong's flag."
It will be connected to Hong Kong's elevated pedestrian network
The main body of the skyscraper will be elevated above the ground and connected into the city's network of raised pedestrian walkways, with a series of courtyards and gardens placed under the building.
"Echoing the organic forms of the natural world; the redevelopment connects with the adjacent public gardens and parks," explained the studio.
"These tranquil outdoor areas flow into the generous communal spaces of the interior; the craftsmanship and precision of the curved glass facade enhancing this seamless connectivity between the building's interiors and the surrounding gardens and city beyond."
2 Murray Road was designed to look like a Bauhinia bud
The skyscraper, which will be built with a high-tensile steel structure, has been designed to achieve a sustainability rating of LEED Platinum and the highest 3-Star rating in China's Green Building Rating Program.
It will be clad in four-ply, double-laminated, double-curved insulated glass units and all floors will be naturally ventilated.
The skyscraper will be topped by a banquet hall
When it is complete, 2 Murray Road will be Zaha Hadid Architects' second project in the city, along with the 78-metre-high Jockey Club Innovation Tower on the Hong Kong Polytechnic University campus, which opened in 2014.
Founded by the late Zaha Hadid in 1980, Zaha Hadid Architects is now led by Patrik Schumacher. The studio has recently revealed designs for a metro station in Moscow, a stadium in China and a housing complex in Honduras.
Images by Arqui9, MIR, Cosmocube, PixelFlakes, Courtesy of ZHA.
Project credits:
Client: Henderson Land Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects Design: Patrik Schumacher ZHA project directors: Jim Heverin; Sara Klomps, Chris Lepine ZHA project team: Brandon Gehrke, Bidisha Sinha, Carlos Michel-Medina, Edgar Payan, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Hazel Wu, Inês Fontoura, Irena Predalic, Janet Cheung, Kaloyan Erevinov, Kar-Hwa Ho, Karoly Markos, Kelvin Ma, Kylie Chan, Magda Smolinska, Melodie Leung, Michael Sims, Muriel Boselli, Nailu Chen, Oliver Bray, Paulo Flores, Simon Yu, Tim Yeung, Torsten Broeder, Yun Zhang ZHA Competition Team: Edgar Payan, Adrian Yiu, Brandon Gehrke, Carlota Boyer, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Irena Predalic, Karoly Markos, Lorena Espaillat Bencosme, Maria Tsironi, Michail Desyllas, Nailu Chen, Paulo Flores, Philip Siedler, Saman Dadgostar, Torsten Broeder, Uli Blum Local architect and AP: Ronald Lu & Partners Building services engineering: WSP Structural and geotechnical engineering: LERA Consulting Structural Engineers (Steel); C M Wong & Associates; Eckersley O’Callaghan Asia (Footbridges & Banquet Hall) Facade engineering: Group 5F; Meinhardt Facade Technology Lighting consultant: LichtVision; Speirs + Major (landscape and media facaade) Landscaping: PWP Landscape Architecture; Earthasia Quantity surveyor: Rider Levett Bucknall Sustainability & civil engineering: Arup Traffic consultant: MVA Acoustic consultant: Shen Milsom & Wilke Vibration consultant: C.F. Ng and Associates AV / IV / Specialist Media consultant: Ptarmigan Integration Limited Security consultant: UCS Hong Kong Signage and wayfinding consultant: Atelier Pacific
The post Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site appeared first on Dezeen.
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architectnews · 4 years
Text
Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site
UK architecture studio Zaha Hadid Architects has unveiled its design for a sinuous, glass, 36-storey skyscraper, which will be built in Hong Kong at 2 Murray Road on what is reportedly the world's most expensive plot.
The 36-storey skyscraper in Hong Kong's central business district will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower by IM Pei, and in close proximity to the HSBC building by Foster + Partners.
It will replace a multistorey car park that was purchased by developer Henderson Land for HK$23.3 billion ($3 billion) in 2017, making it the world's most expensive site according to numerous news outlets.
Top: 2 Murray Road skyscraper in Hong Kong. Above: the skyscraper (centre) will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower (right)
Zaha Hadid Architects' skyscraper will have a glass facade made from a series of curved segments that rise to form two sets of open-air balconies filled with trees.
Directly below the higher balcony, which is located around two-thirds of the way up the skyscraper, will be a planted sky garden. This space will also house a running track.
At the top of the skyscraper, an enclosed banqueting hall will have views across the city.
According to the studio, the building's form was based on the shape of a bud from the Bauhinia plant, which was previously grown near the site and is the flower at the centre of the city's flag.
The skyscraper will have tree-filled balconies and an enclosed sky garden
"The design reinterprets the structural forms and layering of a Bauhinia bud about to blossom," said the studio.
"Known as the Hong Kong orchid tree, the Bauhinia x blakeana was first propagated in the city's botanic gardens above the Murray Road site and its flowering bud features on Hong Kong's flag."
It will be connected to Hong Kong's elevated pedestrian network
The main body of the skyscraper will be elevated above the ground and connected into the city's network of raised pedestrian walkways, with a series of courtyards and gardens placed under the building.
"Echoing the organic forms of the natural world; the redevelopment connects with the adjacent public gardens and parks," explained the studio.
"These tranquil outdoor areas flow into the generous communal spaces of the interior; the craftsmanship and precision of the curved glass facade enhancing this seamless connectivity between the building's interiors and the surrounding gardens and city beyond."
2 Murray Road was designed to look like a Bauhinia bud
The skyscraper, which will be built with a high-tensile steel structure, has been designed to achieve a sustainability rating of LEED Platinum and the highest 3-Star rating in China's Green Building Rating Program.
It will be clad in four-ply, double-laminated, double-curved insulated glass units and all floors will be naturally ventilated.
The skyscraper will be topped by a banquet hall
When it is complete, 2 Murray Road will be Zaha Hadid Architects' second project in the city, along with the 78-metre-high Jockey Club Innovation Tower on the Hong Kong Polytechnic University campus, which opened in 2014.
Founded by the late Zaha Hadid in 1980, Zaha Hadid Architects is now led by Patrik Schumacher. The studio has recently revealed designs for a metro station in Moscow, a stadium in China and a housing complex in Honduras.
Images by Arqui9, MIR, Cosmocube, PixelFlakes, Courtesy of ZHA.
Project credits:
Client: Henderson Land Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects Design: Patrik Schumacher ZHA project directors: Jim Heverin; Sara Klomps, Chris Lepine ZHA project team: Brandon Gehrke, Bidisha Sinha, Carlos Michel-Medina, Edgar Payan, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Hazel Wu, Inês Fontoura, Irena Predalic, Janet Cheung, Kaloyan Erevinov, Kar-Hwa Ho, Karoly Markos, Kelvin Ma, Kylie Chan, Magda Smolinska, Melodie Leung, Michael Sims, Muriel Boselli, Nailu Chen, Oliver Bray, Paulo Flores, Simon Yu, Tim Yeung, Torsten Broeder, Yun Zhang ZHA Competition Team: Edgar Payan, Adrian Yiu, Brandon Gehrke, Carlota Boyer, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Irena Predalic, Karoly Markos, Lorena Espaillat Bencosme, Maria Tsironi, Michail Desyllas, Nailu Chen, Paulo Flores, Philip Siedler, Saman Dadgostar, Torsten Broeder, Uli Blum Local architect and AP: Ronald Lu & Partners Building services engineering: WSP Structural and geotechnical engineering: LERA Consulting Structural Engineers (Steel); C M Wong & Associates; Eckersley O’Callaghan Asia (Footbridges & Banquet Hall) Facade engineering: Group 5F; Meinhardt Facade Technology Lighting consultant: LichtVision; Speirs + Major (landscape and media facaade) Landscaping: PWP Landscape Architecture; Earthasia Quantity surveyor: Rider Levett Bucknall Sustainability & civil engineering: Arup Traffic consultant: MVA Acoustic consultant: Shen Milsom & Wilke Vibration consultant: C.F. Ng and Associates AV / IV / Specialist Media consultant: Ptarmigan Integration Limited Security consultant: UCS Hong Kong Signage and wayfinding consultant: Atelier Pacific
The post Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site appeared first on Dezeen.
0 notes
architectnews · 4 years
Text
Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site
UK architecture studio Zaha Hadid Architects has unveiled its design for a sinuous, glass, 36-storey skyscraper, which will be built in Hong Kong at 2 Murray Road on what is reportedly the world's most expensive plot.
The 36-storey skyscraper in Hong Kong's central business district will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower by IM Pei, and in close proximity to the HSBC building by Foster + Partners.
It will replace a multistorey car park that was purchased by developer Henderson Land for HK$23.3 billion ($3 billion) in 2017, making it the world's most expensive site according to numerous news outlets.
Top: 2 Murray Road skyscraper in Hong Kong. Above: the skyscraper (centre) will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower (right)
Zaha Hadid Architects' skyscraper will have a glass facade made from a series of curved segments that rise to form two sets of open-air balconies filled with trees.
Directly below the higher balcony, which is located around two-thirds of the way up the skyscraper, will be a planted sky garden. This space will also house a running track.
At the top of the skyscraper, an enclosed banqueting hall will have views across the city.
According to the studio, the building's form was based on the shape of a bud from the Bauhinia plant, which was previously grown near the site and is the flower at the centre of the city's flag.
The skyscraper will have tree-filled balconies and an enclosed sky garden
"The design reinterprets the structural forms and layering of a Bauhinia bud about to blossom," said the studio.
"Known as the Hong Kong orchid tree, the Bauhinia x blakeana was first propagated in the city's botanic gardens above the Murray Road site and its flowering bud features on Hong Kong's flag."
It will be connected to Hong Kong's elevated pedestrian network
The main body of the skyscraper will be elevated above the ground and connected into the city's network of raised pedestrian walkways, with a series of courtyards and gardens placed under the building.
"Echoing the organic forms of the natural world; the redevelopment connects with the adjacent public gardens and parks," explained the studio.
"These tranquil outdoor areas flow into the generous communal spaces of the interior; the craftsmanship and precision of the curved glass facade enhancing this seamless connectivity between the building's interiors and the surrounding gardens and city beyond."
2 Murray Road was designed to look like a Bauhinia bud
The skyscraper, which will be built with a high-tensile steel structure, has been designed to achieve a sustainability rating of LEED Platinum and the highest 3-Star rating in China's Green Building Rating Program.
It will be clad in four-ply, double-laminated, double-curved insulated glass units and all floors will be naturally ventilated.
The skyscraper will be topped by a banquet hall
When it is complete, 2 Murray Road will be Zaha Hadid Architects' second project in the city, along with the 78-metre-high Jockey Club Innovation Tower on the Hong Kong Polytechnic University campus, which opened in 2014.
Founded by the late Zaha Hadid in 1980, Zaha Hadid Architects is now led by Patrik Schumacher. The studio has recently revealed designs for a metro station in Moscow, a stadium in China and a housing complex in Honduras.
Images by Arqui9, MIR, Cosmocube, PixelFlakes, Courtesy of ZHA.
Project credits:
Client: Henderson Land Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects Design: Patrik Schumacher ZHA project directors: Jim Heverin; Sara Klomps, Chris Lepine ZHA project team: Brandon Gehrke, Bidisha Sinha, Carlos Michel-Medina, Edgar Payan, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Hazel Wu, Inês Fontoura, Irena Predalic, Janet Cheung, Kaloyan Erevinov, Kar-Hwa Ho, Karoly Markos, Kelvin Ma, Kylie Chan, Magda Smolinska, Melodie Leung, Michael Sims, Muriel Boselli, Nailu Chen, Oliver Bray, Paulo Flores, Simon Yu, Tim Yeung, Torsten Broeder, Yun Zhang ZHA Competition Team: Edgar Payan, Adrian Yiu, Brandon Gehrke, Carlota Boyer, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Irena Predalic, Karoly Markos, Lorena Espaillat Bencosme, Maria Tsironi, Michail Desyllas, Nailu Chen, Paulo Flores, Philip Siedler, Saman Dadgostar, Torsten Broeder, Uli Blum Local architect and AP: Ronald Lu & Partners Building services engineering: WSP Structural and geotechnical engineering: LERA Consulting Structural Engineers (Steel); C M Wong & Associates; Eckersley O’Callaghan Asia (Footbridges & Banquet Hall) Facade engineering: Group 5F; Meinhardt Facade Technology Lighting consultant: LichtVision; Speirs + Major (landscape and media facaade) Landscaping: PWP Landscape Architecture; Earthasia Quantity surveyor: Rider Levett Bucknall Sustainability & civil engineering: Arup Traffic consultant: MVA Acoustic consultant: Shen Milsom & Wilke Vibration consultant: C.F. Ng and Associates AV / IV / Specialist Media consultant: Ptarmigan Integration Limited Security consultant: UCS Hong Kong Signage and wayfinding consultant: Atelier Pacific
The post Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site appeared first on Dezeen.
0 notes
architectnews · 4 years
Text
Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site
UK architecture studio Zaha Hadid Architects has unveiled its design for a sinuous, glass, 36-storey skyscraper, which will be built in Hong Kong at 2 Murray Road on what is reportedly the world's most expensive plot.
The 36-storey skyscraper in Hong Kong's central business district will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower by IM Pei, and in close proximity to the HSBC building by Foster + Partners.
It will replace a multistorey car park that was purchased by developer Henderson Land for HK$23.3 billion ($3 billion) in 2017, making it the world's most expensive site according to numerous news outlets.
Top: 2 Murray Road skyscraper in Hong Kong. Above: the skyscraper (centre) will be built alongside the Bank of China Tower (right)
Zaha Hadid Architects' skyscraper will have a glass facade made from a series of curved segments that rise to form two sets of open-air balconies filled with trees.
Directly below the higher balcony, which is located around two-thirds of the way up the skyscraper, will be a planted sky garden. This space will also house a running track.
At the top of the skyscraper, an enclosed banqueting hall will have views across the city.
According to the studio, the building's form was based on the shape of a bud from the Bauhinia plant, which was previously grown near the site and is the flower at the centre of the city's flag.
The skyscraper will have tree-filled balconies and an enclosed sky garden
"The design reinterprets the structural forms and layering of a Bauhinia bud about to blossom," said the studio.
"Known as the Hong Kong orchid tree, the Bauhinia x blakeana was first propagated in the city's botanic gardens above the Murray Road site and its flowering bud features on Hong Kong's flag."
It will be connected to Hong Kong's elevated pedestrian network
The main body of the skyscraper will be elevated above the ground and connected into the city's network of raised pedestrian walkways, with a series of courtyards and gardens placed under the building.
"Echoing the organic forms of the natural world; the redevelopment connects with the adjacent public gardens and parks," explained the studio.
"These tranquil outdoor areas flow into the generous communal spaces of the interior; the craftsmanship and precision of the curved glass facade enhancing this seamless connectivity between the building's interiors and the surrounding gardens and city beyond."
2 Murray Road was designed to look like a Bauhinia bud
The skyscraper, which will be built with a high-tensile steel structure, has been designed to achieve a sustainability rating of LEED Platinum and the highest 3-Star rating in China's Green Building Rating Program.
It will be clad in four-ply, double-laminated, double-curved insulated glass units and all floors will be naturally ventilated.
The skyscraper will be topped by a banquet hall
When it is complete, 2 Murray Road will be Zaha Hadid Architects' second project in the city, along with the 78-metre-high Jockey Club Innovation Tower on the Hong Kong Polytechnic University campus, which opened in 2014.
Founded by the late Zaha Hadid in 1980, Zaha Hadid Architects is now led by Patrik Schumacher. The studio has recently revealed designs for a metro station in Moscow, a stadium in China and a housing complex in Honduras.
Images by Arqui9, MIR, Cosmocube, PixelFlakes, Courtesy of ZHA.
Project credits:
Client: Henderson Land Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects Design: Patrik Schumacher ZHA project directors: Jim Heverin; Sara Klomps, Chris Lepine ZHA project team: Brandon Gehrke, Bidisha Sinha, Carlos Michel-Medina, Edgar Payan, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Hazel Wu, Inês Fontoura, Irena Predalic, Janet Cheung, Kaloyan Erevinov, Kar-Hwa Ho, Karoly Markos, Kelvin Ma, Kylie Chan, Magda Smolinska, Melodie Leung, Michael Sims, Muriel Boselli, Nailu Chen, Oliver Bray, Paulo Flores, Simon Yu, Tim Yeung, Torsten Broeder, Yun Zhang ZHA Competition Team: Edgar Payan, Adrian Yiu, Brandon Gehrke, Carlota Boyer, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Irena Predalic, Karoly Markos, Lorena Espaillat Bencosme, Maria Tsironi, Michail Desyllas, Nailu Chen, Paulo Flores, Philip Siedler, Saman Dadgostar, Torsten Broeder, Uli Blum Local architect and AP: Ronald Lu & Partners Building services engineering: WSP Structural and geotechnical engineering: LERA Consulting Structural Engineers (Steel); C M Wong & Associates; Eckersley O’Callaghan Asia (Footbridges & Banquet Hall) Facade engineering: Group 5F; Meinhardt Facade Technology Lighting consultant: LichtVision; Speirs + Major (landscape and media facaade) Landscaping: PWP Landscape Architecture; Earthasia Quantity surveyor: Rider Levett Bucknall Sustainability & civil engineering: Arup Traffic consultant: MVA Acoustic consultant: Shen Milsom & Wilke Vibration consultant: C.F. Ng and Associates AV / IV / Specialist Media consultant: Ptarmigan Integration Limited Security consultant: UCS Hong Kong Signage and wayfinding consultant: Atelier Pacific
The post Zaha Hadid Architects reveals design for skyscraper on world's most expensive site appeared first on Dezeen.
0 notes
architectnews · 4 years
Text
2 Murray Road, Hong Kong, China
2 Murray Road, HK Offices, China, Hong Kong Commercial Development, Modern Chinese Tower Building, Images
2 Murray Road in Hong Kong
23 Sep 2020
2 Murray Road, HK
Design: Zaha Hadid Architects
Location: Hong Kong, China
image © Arqui9
Located in the heart of Hong Kong’s central business district, the 36-storey Murray Road project for Henderson Land replaces a multi-storey car park to create an urban oasis adjacent to Chater Garden within a short walking distance to both Central and Admiralty MTR metro stations.
images © Arqui9
With its base elevated above the ground to shelter courtyards and gardens cultivated with trees and plants in the centre of one of the world’s busiest cities, the design creates new civic plazas that are enveloped by nature.
Echoing the organic forms of the natural world; the redevelopment connects with the adjacent public gardens and parks. These tranquil outdoor areas flow into the generous communal spaces of the interior; the craftsmanship and precision of the curved glass façade enhancing this seamless connectivity between the building’s interiors and the surrounding gardens and city beyond.
image © MIR
The design reinterprets the structural forms and layering of a Bauhinia bud about to blossom. Known as the Hong Kong orchid tree, the Bauhinia x blakeana was first propagated in the city’s botanic gardens above the Murray Road site and its flowering bud features on Hong Kong’s flag.
image © PixelFlakes
At the core of the city’s financial district, the project is situated at the east-west / north-south junction of Hong Kong’s network of elevated pedestrian walkways; connecting directly with surrounding gardens, shops and restaurants as well as the offices of leading financial and civic institutions.
A high-tensile steel structure provides very wide span (up to 26m) of naturally lit, column-free, Grade A office space with a 5 metre floor-to-floor height giving maximum flexibility; its vertical core located on the eastern side of the building to optimise views of Chater Garden and the city’s renowned skyline to the west.
images © MIR
Working with the Henderson Land and Arup’s Building Sustainability Team, the design has achieved LEED Platinum and WELL Platinum pre-certification together with the highest 3-Star rating of China’s Green Building Rating Program. The design, procurement and construction targets full certification at occupancy.
The building’s smart management system creates a contactless pathway for all occupants from the street to their workstation that eliminates direct contact with communal surfaces and includes AI-assisted lift controls. Using a mobile phone, contactless smart card or biometric recognition, occupants can enter the building and pass security, call lifts to their office floor and access other zones such as lounge areas and washrooms.
Arranged for access on multiple levels, the large double-height foyer at ground level welcomes staff and visitors with its interplay of natural light, planting and organic forms leading up to the second floor public lobby on the city’s elevated walkway network. Suspended above the canopy of its surrounding tress, the sculptural glass façade of this expansive lobby defines a variety of nested spaces, each refined for purpose and experience.
Designed for intuitive navigation and to accommodate evolving patterns of working with enhanced workplace flexibility, the colour palettes of these finely detailed spaces differentiate key destinations within the tower.
Located on the refuge floor, the Sky Garden is an outdoor recreational space with running track and an aquaponics planting network that acts as an effective biological air-purifying filter by consuming contaminants.
The banqueting hall at the top of the tower offers panoramic views of the city’s surrounding skyline. Hosting a variety of public and corporate events, its glazed roof and façade will ensure this space becomes one of the city’s most memorable venues.
Designed to withstand the region’s powerful summer typhoons, the façade is comprised of 4-ply, double-laminated, double-curved insulated glass units – the first of their kind in Hong Kong – to effectively insulate the building and reduce its cooling load as well as build resilience.
Hybrid ventilation is controlled by the building’s automated management system and enables all office levels to be naturally ventilated. This natural ventilation can be supplemented when required with mechanical dehumidification and filtration to further enhance the indoor environment and air quality.
The building’s air quality monitoring system will detect the degree of occupancy in any interior and automatically adjust indoor air temperature, humidity and fresh air volume to meet demand. These smart systems learn to accurately predict daily occupancy trends to optimise energy demand, ensuring increased efficiencies with lower energy consumption.
Two weather stations installed at street level and roof level will monitor real-time outdoor conditions including PM10, PM2.5, ozone, daylight (solar irradiation), wind speed (m/s), rainfall (mm), temperature (oC), humidity (%) and noise (dB). These weather stations will inform occupants of outdoor air quality and are connected to the building’s automated management system to adjust the tower’s hybrid ventilation as required, ensuring the optimum supply of high quality outdoor air.
The redevelopment also incorporates a solar responsive ventilator (SRV) along the western perimeter of each floor to enhance the comfort of occupants. Powered by photovoltaics, the low speed, silent SRV creates a channel of air that has the ability to adjust solar radiative heat to the perimeter zone for further comfort.
A 26% reduction in electricity demand will be achieved with the use of smart chiller plant optimization, high-efficiency HVAC equipment and daylight sensors that reduce artificial lighting during periods of sufficient natural light.
A top-down construction method is employed to accelerate the redevelopment programme on-site by implementing deep basement and above-ground construction at the same time.
With construction works beginning last year and its procurement targeting embodied carbon reductions as well as the use of recycled materials, 2 Murray Road looks to the future with the integration of advanced design, construction and operational technologies.
2 Murray Road in HK, China – Building Information
Height: 190m (36 levels including ground, 5 below ground) Floor area: 43,200 sq.m Site coverage: 65% developed
Project Team Client: Henderson Land Architect: Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) Design: Patrik Schumacher ZHA Project Directors: Jim Heverin; Sara Klomps, Chris Lepine ZHA Project Team: Brandon Gehrke, Bidisha Sinha, Carlos Michel-Medina, Edgar Payan, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Hazel Wu, Inês Fontoura, Irena Predalic, Janet Cheung, Kaloyan Erevinov, Kar-Hwa Ho, Karoly Markos, Kelvin Ma, Kylie Chan, Magda Smolinska, Melodie Leung, Michael Sims, Muriel Boselli, Nailu Chen, Oliver Bray, Paulo Flores, Simon Yu, Tim Yeung, Torsten Broeder, Yun Zhang ZHA Competition Team: Edgar Payan, Adrian Yiu, Brandon Gehrke, Carlota Boyer, Eddie Can, Fernando Alvarenga, Irena Predalic, Karoly Markos, Lorena Espaillat Bencosme, Maria Tsironi, Michail Desyllas, Nailu Chen, Paulo Flores, Philip Siedler, Saman Dadgostar, Torsten Broeder, Uli Blum
Local Architect & AP: Ronald Lu & Partners (Hong Kong) Building Services Engineering: WSP (Asia) Structural & Geotechnical Engineering: LERA Consulting Structural Engineers (Steel); C M Wong & Associates; Eckersley O’Callaghan Asia (Footbridges & Banquet Hall) Facade Engineering: Group 5F; Meinhardt Facade Technology (Hong Kong) Lighting consultant: LichtVision; Speirs + Major (Landscape & Media Façade) Landscaping: PWP Landscape Architecture; Earthasia Quantity Surveyor: Rider Levett Bucknall Sustainability & Civil Engineering: Arup Traffic consultant: MVA (Hong Kong) Acoustic consultant: Shen Milsom & Wilke Vibration consultant: C.F. Ng and Associates AV / IV / Specialist Media consultant: Ptarmigan Integration Limited Security consultant: UCS Hong Kong Signage & Wayfinding consultant: Atelier Pacific
image © Arqui9
Renders by Arqui9, MIR and PixelFlakes
Copyright © Zaha Hadid Architects.
Zaha Hadid Architects
2 Murray Road, Hong Kong, China images / information from Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA)
Jockey Club Innovation Tower Hong Kong – external link to ZHA website
Location: 11 Yuk Choi Road, Block V, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Hong Kong, Eastern Asia
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