Architect Spotlight: Schmidt Hammer Lassen

As the new Aberdeen University Library building is unveiled this week, we thought we’d take a look at the Danish architects Schmidt Hammer Lassen. Famed for their ‘Black Diamond’ (the extension to the Danish Royal Library), SHL aim to create distinctive, modern structures that focus on light, open-plan spaces and the interplay between building and its context in the wider environment.

HISTORY

SHL was formed in 1986 by architects Morten Schmidt, Bjarne Hammer and John F. Lassen in Aarhus, , but remained relatively under the international radar until the 1997 completion of the Katuaq Culture Centre in Greenland. This beautiful municipal building was overlaid with a screen clad with undulating waves of golden larch wood, inspired by the shapes created by the northern lights.

Katuaq Culture Centre: photos by Trine og Mads and Alankomaat

Katuaq Culture Centre: photos by Trine og Mads and Alankomaat

Later came other prolific works in Denmark and Scandinavia, including their most famous work: the Black Diamond. Born out of an architectural competition by the Danish Ministry of Cultural Affairs, the Schmidt Hammer Lassen design was chosen as the winner in 1993. Construction didn’t begin until 1995, however, and the extension was finally finished and inaugurated in 1999. Following this important work, SHL began to branch out, entering and winning design competitions outside of Denmark and Scandinavia, including works on the International Criminal Court at The Hague (2010), an eco-tower based in Warsaw (2011) and the Aberdeen New Library Building (2006). New offices were opened in London and Oslo in 2007, and the practice has undertaken design work as far away as China and Canada, proving their international standing. They also have the plaudits to back up their ideas: seven design awards won in the last five years alone, ranging from the MIPIM AR Future Projects award in the residential category to the 2011 LEAF award for structural design.

DESIGN PHILOSOPHY

In line with their Scandinavian background, Schmidt Hammer Lassen are architects concerned with sustainability, context, welfare and social responsibility as well as the aesthetics and practicalities of a project. They are perhaps best known for their quirky, angular, neomodern structures, but their designs always focus on flexible, open plan spaces with lots of natural light, creating a building designed for its inhabitants rather than its inhabitants having to work around the design. Following the principles of modernist design, function takes precedent over form with lots of multi-use spaces and a heavy emphasis on sustainable design, but the finished product is far from perfunctory and practical and instead takes on a streamlined, minimalist beauty.

Halmstad Library: photo by ET Photo

Halmstad Library: photo by ET Photo

In terms of design aesthetics, SHL tends to utilise a simple, almost sparse signature look that often centres on the interplay of lines and angles, with the occasional curve. Colours are often kept neutral and natural, with stone, wood and glass existing alongside soft renders and cold metals. The emphasis on natural light plays with concepts of inside and outside, with extensive glazing blurring the line between the two. Reflections of the sky and the surrounding environment within the glass also allows for interplay between the two binaries, as well as allowing designs to settle into the context of their surroundings more easily. A democratic process of architectural design at the practice allows for a recognisable, cohesive style to emerge despite the firm existing across three separate countries and four different offices.

CASE STUDIES

THE CULTURE ISLAND, DENMARK

Opened in 2005, Culture Island (or KulturØen in Danish) houses a library, cinema, restaurant and tourist , and is set alone in the harbour of Middelfart on the island of Fyn, just off the coast of mainland Denmark. The structure itself is an exercise in the interplay of sweeping curves and sharp angles, shapes inspired by its position on the waterfront and invoking images of sails and waves. In order to make the structure seem light, reflection both of the sky within the panels of glazing and of the structure itself in the water is used, again drawing parallels between the building and the water. The use of silver-grey zinc cladding also echoes the cold greys of the sea around Fyn. Here we can see that the environment of the site has inspired the design of the building, allowing it such a modern building to inhabit an isolated space within the old harbour without feeling out of place.

The Culture Island; images by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

The Culture Island; images by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

NYKREDIT HEADQUARTERS, DENMARK

Schmidt Hammer Lassen won a 1998 design competition with their distinct riff on the traditional cuboid office block for the new Nykredit Headquarters. Essentially a large, glazed cube, the new headquarters feature cantilevered, glazed meeting rooms suspended in the large central atrium. As well as creating a dramatic visual feature, the building focuses on transparency, imitating the water of Copenhagen Harbour on which it is sited. There is also the suggestion of a transparency of business practices within the headquarters too, with meeting room spaces and offices visible throughout the atrium and even from outside of the building, transforming the traditional office from a place of privacy to a place where passers-by can literally view all of the company’s inner workings.

Nykredit Headquarters; images by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

Nykredit Headquarters; images by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

The light, airy spaces within the building offer a calm place to work with beautiful views over the harbour, and the internal spaces have been decorated with specially commissioned pieces of art, including a 30 foot mural by Olav Christopher Jenssen and a water sculpture by Anita Jørgensen. The finished building won two awards: the 2001 Architecture Prize of the Municipality of Copenhagen, and the 2002 FX International Interior Design Award in the category Best Office Building.

UNIVERSITY OF ABERDEEN LIBRARY,

Winner of an international design competition in 2005, the new library at the University of Aberdeen has been designed to serve not only the students, but also the wider community. Set on a bed of Scottish rock, the outside façade looks remarkably like granite under a microscope, giving a connection to Aberdeen’s nickname of ‘the City of Granite’. The Academic Square outside of the library is also designed to offer a link between the University and the wider community, allowing a public space where people can gather, with the library forming the west end of an east-west axis across the university campus.

New University of Aberdeen Library; images by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

New University of Aberdeen Library; images by Schmidt Hammer Lassen

The ten storey glass cube is given a surprising delicacy through the use of decorative external cladding, and the sharp angles of the external structure contrast with the organic feel of the interior. Unexpectedly, the sharpness of the exterior is counteracted with irregular curves and an eight storey spiralling atrium. The structure is also built according to sustainable practices, incorporating photovoltaic cells and a rainwater harvesting scheme on the roof and a displacement ventilation system with the technology to heat or cool occupied spaces only, thus saving energy as compared to conventional systems. The external decoration is also part of the sustainable design, as the panels and glazing have been worked out to a ratio that allows for the maximum amount of natural light with the minimum amount of solar loss and gain. The library achieved a BREEAM rating of Excellent.

World Architecture: Dubai’s Lost Projects Part 2

is a fascinating place for architects, with some of the world’s tallest, strangest and best projects in the process of being built right now. However, despite ’s relative wealth, it couldn’t escape the effects of a global recession. We look at some of the best projects that haven’t yet got past the drawing board in the second part of our .

6. BURJ AL ALAM

Burj Al Alam – renders by Fortune Group

Burj Al Alam – renders by Fortune Group

The Burj Al Alam was to be one of the world’s tallest buildings until its construction was put on hold shortly after piling works to the foundations was completed due to delays in payments from investors. At a proposed 510 metres high, it would be taller than the famous Taipei 101 tower in Taiwan, but renders show it to be a delicate, intricate design with a slender, hyperboloid tower topped with a crown resembling a crystal flower. As a mixed-use tower, 74 floors would be dedicated to office space and the top 27 floors would be residential and luxury hotel accommodation. Within the six storey crown there would be a luxury Turkish bath, sky garden and private club facilities, and there would be retail units situated in the base of the tower. Construction began in 2006, but the tower is still suffering from heavy delays and may be on hold for the foreseeable future.

7. ANARA TOWER

The Anara Tower – renders by Atkins Design Studio

The Anara Tower – renders by Atkins Design Studio

Don’t be fooled by its appearance – the Anara Tower wasn’t a wind turbine but, more surprisingly, it didn’t even contain a wind turbine anywhere in its design. The turbine-style glazed pod at the very top of the tower was, in fact, a luxury restaurant designed to give the best of panoramic views from around 600 metres in the air. The shape of the tower was also designed in such a way that 60% of the building had panoramic ocean views, as well as having two multi-purpose sports courts, food and retail areas, a swimming pool and four sky gardens providing green outdoor space for residents.

Influenced by the iconic shape of minarets, Atkins Design Studio sought a recognisable shape for both local and international visitors, deciding on the wind turbine design. Not only did the design showcase the tower’s eco-credentials (maximising water and energy efficiency in addition to complying with LEED certification requirements), but it had also been designed with the future in mind, with the rear elevation allowing for future expansion of the building through four connecting sky bridges. Unfortunately the tower design wasn’t completely ‘future-proofed’, and was cancelled in 2009.

8. ROAD AND TRANSPORT AUTHORITY HEADQUARTERS

The RTA Headquarters – Centre: interior render from Design Design LLC; left and right renders of opposing elevations by Zwarts and Jansma

The RTA Headquarters – Centre: interior render from Design Design LLC; Left and right: renders of opposing elevations by Zwarts and Jansma

Planned to be built in the middle of an artificial lake, the new Road and Transport Authority Headquarters would have been an eye-catching addition to Dubai’s skyline. Created by the Dutch firm Zwarts and Jansma Architects and influenced by the shape of the RTA logo, the structure featured two 20 storey high electronic screens that would have displayed traffic data to the surrounding area. The surface of the manmade lake was to come alive in office hours, swirling and rippling to make a kinetic water show, but at night it would have been calm and serene, reflecting the sky and the building in a ‘water mirror’ effect and making the structure appear to float above the water. The architects were especially interested in the intersection of waterways, subways and highways in reflecting the core work of the Road and Transport Authority.

The unusual exterior, described as a ‘glass crystal with Venetian blinds’, would have been created through the use of sun breaks to reduce reflection and solar gain, saving 20% of the energy usually used to cool the interior. The gridded nature of the façade and its unusual angles would also have made the structure appear different from different angles due to light refraction.

Unfortunately, the project has now been cancelled.

9. TRUMP INTERNATIONAL HOTEL AND TOWER

The Trump International Hotel & Tower – Left: Original design; Centre & right: Revised design – all renders by WS Atkins

The Trump International Hotel & Tower – Left: Original design; Centre & right: Revised design – all renders by WS Atkins

Set to be the centrepiece of the famous Palm Jumeirah Islands in Dubai, the Trump International Hotel and Tower in Dubai underwent several incarnations before deciding on the imposing modernist split tower structure that was set to be completed by 2009. The original design was a tulip-inspired structure with four golden petals sheathing a central circular tower, but later redesigns focused on a split tower that linked at the top, with a monorail and station situated in the open core between the two tower shafts. Positioned in the ‘trunk’ of the Palm Islands, the tower would have acted as a gateway-like structure to the rest of the resort.

As a partnership between local developers Nakheel and the Trump Organisation, the project foundered as a result of the global recession, along with several other Nakheel projects. After being put on hold indefinitely in 2009, the project was finally cancelled in early 2011.

10. DYNAMIC TOWER

The Dynamic Tower – Left: Differing shapes of the Tower 	 Right: The mechanics of the Tower – all renders by Dynamic Architecture

The Dynamic Tower – Left: Differing shapes of the Tower; Right: The mechanics of the Tower – all renders by Dynamic Architecture

The Dynamic Tower is a fairly radical idea, even for the architectural excesses of Dubai – a 420 metre high tower where each floor revolves independently at a maximum rate of 6 metres per minute, or one revolution every 90 minutes. The movement would result in a tower with a constantly evolving shape and appearance. In addition, it would be the world’s first prefabricated , with over 90% of the tower manufactured in a factory and shipped to site, where it would be assembled in two-thirds of the time of a normal . The only true construction work on site would be the building of the core, which would contain services and supply each floor with clean water based on the technology used for in-flight refuelling of aircraft. Each apartment would be a pre-built ‘module’ that would come preinstalled with kitchen and bathroom suites.

Despite the size and scale of the project, the tower would be self-powered through the use of renewable energy. Solar panels fixed to the roof and top of each floor and wind turbines situated between each floor will provide enough electricity to power another five similar-sized towers as well as meet the needs of the Dynamic Tower.

The project has, however, been controversial for more than just the design. The architect, David Fisher, has never built a skyscraper before, and has distributed a biography that claims he has an honorary doctorate from an institution that does not exist. He has also failed to state where the tower would be built as he ‘wanted to keep it a surprise’. Due to delays in acquiring land and issues with patents, as well as financial funding problems due to the global recession, construction has not yet started on the project, despite announcements in 2008 that completion would occur in 2010.