VISION Issue 46 | Page 10

VISION 46 — BABY GRAND How close is the completed building to your original presentation? The concept design was received very favourably by the clients and thereafter the design team made many refinements but no significant changes to the architectural intent. The Incubator was conceived of as a pair of pavilions, each with flexible internal layouts that lend themselves to the future adaptations and functions of the start-ups inside. A strong driver was the need for collaboration and interaction between individual start- ups and with each other, in addition to privacy for each start-up to operate with confidentiality. The timber frame really recalls a certain old-fashioned quality that celebrates assembly. Timber was selected as the main construction material for its capacity to be beautifully engineered, swiftly fabricated and to capture a high quality finish. With the majority of components prefabricated offsite, rapid construction was achievable on site and with minimal disruption to the concurrent university semester. The resulting building was completed within five months of construction commencing. We designed the building to be assembled off the back of a very large truck. All of the panels were sized such that they could be moved as modular prefabricated components. That’s the roof systems, the floor cassettes, wall panels, and glazing. That was designed for rapid on-site assembly and there’s a very composed geometry to all of the set out. There was also the intended design purpose for future dis- assembly and relocation elsewhere on the campus and this remains an option for the University. “I really love the corners of these buildings because they all open out to the landscape, and they all respond in a very sensitive way to the bringing together of materials, and in this case it’s glass coming together.” LUKE JOHNSON, ARCHITECT