VISION Issue 40 | Page 33

33 Did you meet any client resistance when you proposed this alternative to the more conventional façade system? They eventually embraced the idea of doing something different. The commercial realities in terms of what people expect in a commercial building also tempered the result. And so we might have had an even more undulating façade and undulating glass lines in terms of sill heights and head heights of windows. They became a bit more standardized in the sense of corporate reality. Above: Viridian Double Glazed Units provide generous rooftop views. Left: Rather than crowded by the usual spaghetti of rooftop services, Katz has condensed these to the south edge and allowed the landscape/ play area by Botanical Traditions to bloom. Was the building considered specifically with the pre-school centre facility in mind as the anchor tenant? The building was always considered as a primary social building for the estate – not only a pre-school centre, but also gymnasiums, pharmacies and other community services. It’s a smaller footprint than a typical commercial building and so it was always focused on the more social functions. Once a business estate reaches a certain size, it lends itself to other social functions. Have you incurred any greater costs in striving for difference? Well we certainly tried to detail it architecturally in a way that’s unique and so whilst it’s using all the standard corporate technologies in terms of precast and glaze façades, curtain wall systems, it’s the way they’re articulated and integrated that gives it an improved sense of being, if you like without any cost penalties. So, for instance, the way the glass façade’s detached from the core masonry elements means it floats and gives it a very articulated response.