From Saudi’s eastern region to its west coast, Buro Happold is being seen on the country’s construction scene more than ever, adding considerably to some stunning projects.
01 May 2010
ANYONE who worked in Saudi Arabia in the 1980s would recall the prestige held by Riyadh’s Kasr Al Hokm (Justice Palace) project in construction circles at that time. Now, two decades later, Buro Happold has been called upon again by the developer Arriyadh Development Authority (ADA) to undertake a similar redevelopment and regeneration project.
Buro Happold and Happold Consulting have been engaged to develop a strategy to attain Unesco world heritage site status for the town of Atturaif that adopts distinctly Saudi Arabian heritage principles. Complementary goals of the project are to regenerate the area and to preserve the site’s heritage assets.
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Addiriyyah ... culturally significant. |
SUSTAINABLE GARDENS
Tenders are due to be submitted this month for the construction of King Abdullah International Gardens (KAIG), which last month won the 2010 coveted Cityscape Award for Real Estate in the Middle East and North Africa region in the ‘Best Sustainable Development’ category. The project has also previously emerged winner in the overall global leisure category for commercial property at the International Property Awards last November.
A joint venture between leading Barton Willmore and Buro Happold has completed the design for the KAIG – a giant botanical garden commissioned by the City of Riyadh as a gift to King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia to celebrate his accession to the throne. The leading British consultancies won an international competition in 2007 to design KAIG and have completed the design with advisers from the UK’s National History Museum and Eden Project.
KAIG features a 10-hectare (ha) building, which will house the world’s largest indoor garden – the size of 15 football pitches. It will be set within a 160-ha site in the arid desert of the Saudi central region and, as a cornerstone of Riyadh’s growth plans, will provide a new destination for Saudis and international visitors.
Visitors will be able to walk amongst plants, trees and flowers, which thrived over 400 million years ago, as well as a range of external gardens, which will include a maze, a butterfly enclosure and aviary.
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King Abdullah International Gardens... will house the world’s largest indoor garden. |
CULTURAL LANDMARK
While KAIG is a tribute to King Abdullah, King Abdul Aziz Centre for Knowledge and Culture (KAACKC) celebrates the accomplishments of the giant oil conglomerate Saudi Aramco, which marked its 75th anniversary in 2008.
Designed by Snohetta and with Buro Happold working on all aspects of the building from structures to services, the centre will provide a range of activities serving the local population and will be a cultural landmark on a regional, national and global horizon.
When completed, the project will contain some 60,000 sq m of diverse cultural facilities, including an auditorium, cinema, library, exhibition hall, museum (situated underground beneath a landscaped dome) and archive.
The centre’s innovative design resembles a rock mass made up of five separate, yet connected buildings. For example, a keystone is suspended between a 17-storey tower and a library ‘pebble’, which further reflects the appearance of a rock mass.
Each of the five buildings has a unique function and structural geometry and is independently stable and isolated from the buildings in the landscaped dome, through the use of movement joints at the point where the buildings pass through the landscaped roof. Exceptions to this are the Great Hall, which is partially supported and stabilised by a connection to the adjacent back-of-house structure, and the keystone, which is stabilised by a discreet connection to the library building (‘pebble’).
In addition to its striking form, sustainability has been a key consideration in the design of the centre, which aims to achieve a Leed (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) certification.
Buro Happold is responsible for the civil, ground, building services, MEP (mechanical, electrical and plumbing), façade, structural, acoustics, fire engineering, sustainability and alternative technologies, specialist lighting, IT and security engineering services.
SPEEDING AHEAD
Meanwhile, work is well under way on the Haramain High-speed Railway (HHR), where Buro Happold in joint venture with Foster + Partners and Buro Happold is currently involved in the design of four stations for the project, following a contract award in April last year.
The HHR is a major infrastructure project, conceived to forge new social and economic links by dramatically cutting journey times between the cities in western Saudi Arabia and by providing a new transport option for many of the pilgrims making the journey to the pilgrimage centres of Makkah and Madinah.
Passing via Jeddah and the King Abdullah Economic City, the new HHR service will be operated by state-of-the-art, high-speed trains, capable of reaching speeds of up to 300 km per hour. By providing an attractive alternative to the use of private vehicles, the scheme will considerably lessen the future impact of these journeys on the environment.
The HHR’s fast-track construction programme has led to a modularised approach to the station design with a high degree of prefabrication. While all stations will share a common planning strategy, each will have a distinct identity and building envelope to respond to the respective cities they serve.
All will provide extensive facilities and a high-quality passenger experience, with generous circulation spaces and segregated arrival and departure zones. The public areas – including platforms – will be environmentally controlled to enhance comfort and will have filtered natural daylight throughout.
Mouzhan Majidi, chief executive of Foster + Partners, says: “The HHR project represents a major investment in sustainable public transport by Saudi Arabia, with potentially far-reaching social and economic consequences. The project will foster new social and cultural connections across the kingdom’s western cities, and the design of the four new stations will support and symbolise this progressive approach.”
Martin Walsh, project director at Buro Happold, says: “The HHR is a genuinely exciting and challenging project and one of the most important transportation initiatives in the kingdom. The innovative scalable modular approach to the design of the stations will enable the speedy delivery of high-quality station buildings – fast-track in every sense.”
The 450-km-long railway is being developed by Saudi Railways Organisation, which anticipates that the HHR project will be fully operational by November 2012.