VISION Issue 5 | Page 26

26 Vision Magazine Is there a practice fingerprint/signature? We try to produce timeless, elegant buildings both beautiful and practical. We’re very grateful and delighted by the architectural awards received for this project, but we’re mindful that all our buildings need to transcend the fashions of the present and age well and be as relevant and graceful in the future as they are now. What did you absorb from the site into the work? It’s fundamentally a two-storey building but the theatre component really grows to three or four stories. We had to integrate that bulk with the campus that’s predominantly one and two storey buildings. We’ve carefully stepped the form of the building and burrowed it into the hill to achieve this. What was your starting point for glazing? We have specified Viridian glazing for many years because it has an excellent reputation, has been around for a long time and the Viridian team has provided good support. The project glazing is designed to open up the lobby to visitors and bring light into the main circulation spaces. The green tint of the glazing ties in very well with the landscaping in the forecourt and the green trim used through the campus. The transparency allows the building to be connected to the outside landscaped environment and visually expand the space. Were there difficulties reconciling views and sunlight with comfort and thermal control? The lobby with its external covered colonnade faces south onto the entry forecourt and parking areas so sunlight was not a problem here. The glazing to the west is shielded by large stone blade walls while sunshades are provided on the northern side. Some smaller sections of east and west glazing are protected with aluminium louvres. Thermal control is also achieved with very high levels of insulation in walls and roof which also acoustically insulate the building. What are some of the other principal benefits of glass? In a school, transparency is very important in providing spaces that people feel free and safe to enter and use and which can be passively supervised by teaching staff. As such, all the teaching areas around the perimeter of the theatre make extensive use of floor to ceiling glazing. Were there any fears or opposition to such extensive glazing? No. We faced the double-height lobby glazing into the forecourt area of the school to the south and the building doesn’t overlook the neighbouring houses on the other side of the street. On the west side that does face the houses, large stone blade walls block any overlooking - and light spill at night - and serve to scale down the apparent size of the building. As this is a building that is often used at night and whose lobby and entry areas are lit up, the location and orientation of the entry was a very important consideration in the design of the building and its respectful interaction with the neighbours. It’s quite a cinematic use of the material. The external public presentation to the north is quite private and turns its attention away from the busy road and neighbourhood. The south elevation opens right up to the campus, parking areas and forecourts allowing visitors and passers-by to be aware of events or functions and to welcome them. What do you take from this project to the next? Excellence in any field requires a lot of enthusiasm, energy and perseverance. It requires a team of positive people from different walks of life who have a common desire to do something great.