Prototyping the Liquid Wall: Performative Elegance in Envelope Design

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ADVANCED FAÇADE SYSTEMS

SESSION 21

DATE // START TIME // ROOM NUMBER:

Thursday, September 30, 2010 – 9::00am – Altman B

ABSTRACT:

Panel will discuss the technical and energy efficient aspects of the Liquid Wall as an architecturally versatile, systems-integrated, high-performance, unitized building envelope of a type never seen before. Winner of the American Institute of Architects’ Open Call for Innovative Curtain Wall Design, the Liquid Wall is currently in full-scale prototype production.

MODERATOR:

Peter Arbour, Project Manager, RFR Consulting Engineers

SPEAKERS:

Robert Del Vento, Jr., Architectural Project Manager, Coreslab Structures
Mitsu Edwards, Structural Engineer, Project Director, RFR Consulting Engineers
Kelly Henry, Architectural Project Manager, Lafarge North America
Kevin D. Schaefer, Principal, CSArch

DESCRIPTION:

The Liquid Wall derives its name from the three aspects of its innovative design. The first is its fabrication method of concrete casting; the liquid state of poured concrete provides an architectural freedom unprecedented in glazed, unitized curtain wall design. The second is its inherent capacity for form-finding; the initial design, arising from a strict adherence to the structural criteria of a building’s envelope, results in undulating profiles and an aesthetic of “frozen flow.” The third and most important liquid aspect is the actual flow of liquids through the spandrel cassette, which captures solar energy transmitting it to systems for use as radiant heat, domestic hot water production, and dehumidification of ventilation systems.

Each Liquid Wall unit consists of two concrete frames cast in Ductal®, an ultra-high-performance concrete (20,000psi), and martensitic stainless steel tension bars. The panels are assembled using a cast-in, structural, thermal break technology of pultruded glass fiber. Vision panels are of clear triple glazing, maintaining an excellent u-value with a 70% glazed exterior wall.

The panel’s spandrel cassette is similar to an inserted shadowbox. It is a glazed assembly containing a system of tubes set against an energy-absorbing backpan. A non-freezing liquid mixture flows into the system from inside the building. The heated fluid is then recovered from the panels and transferred to one of several possible uses. This simple, passive harvesting of solar radiation energy significantly reduces a building’s fossil fuel energy consumption. The integration of the envelope with the MEP systems provides an economy of means and of construction without additional cost and without compromising the efficiency of the envelope installation process.

The use of ultra-high performance concrete reduces the required material by 90% relative to other precast concrete wall products. The post-fixing of reinforcing armature eliminates the need to extract steel rebar for concrete recycling. The Liquid Wall aims to be a 100% recyclable system, and is expressly designed to avoid the extensive use of typical high-carbon-footprint materials such as aluminium.

Panelists will also discuss the Liquid Wall Prototype, which is being constructed using the direct transfer of 3D computer modelling to CNC milling of pieces that are used to create state-of-the-art flexible molds. The fabrication of molds and of the panels is a repeatable process that can streamline the production of facades covering large surface areas of multiple designs that precisely address the needs of various orientations and solar exposures. All sunshading devices and decorative grillwork can be cast of-a-piece with the structural framing, allowing reduction of the costs and risks of on-site assembly procedures. In addition, the smooth, highly detailable finish of the cast concrete provides endless design possibilities for architects and façade designers, possibilities not seen since the use of cast iron and cast terra cotta, with an integral structure and environmental performance that exceeds the ever more stringent criteria of today’s building envelope.

The functions required by building envelopes remain the same throughout the process of technical innovation. All facades must insulate without thermal bridging; they must provide water and air seals and secondary drainage channels; they must resist the vertical spread of fire; they must be constructed efficiently at an industrial scale; and they must operate reliably without excessive maintenance costs or systemic failure. The Liquid Wall is a system that achieves all of this while tapping into our most universal and dependable source of free energy.

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Integrated Design Case Studies: Europe

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HIGH PERFORMANCE CASE STUDIES: 300-level

SESSION 14

DATE // START TIME // ROOM NUMBER:

Wednesday, September 29, 2010 – 4:00pm – Altman B

ABSTRACT:

While advances in building technology and professional education programs have tended to fragment the design industries, Integrated Design concepts reveal a growing commitment to improving the built environment through a more holistic and process-oriented design approach.  This panel will present a series of pioneering European building designs inspired by these ideas.

MODERATOR:

Mitsu Edwards, Structural Engineer, Project Director, RFR Consulting Engineers

SPEAKERS:

Peter Arbour, Facade Architect, Project Manager, RFR Consulting Engineers
Scott Severson, Project Architect, Morphosis Architects
Merritt Bucholz, Principal, Bucholz McEvoy Architects
William Logan, Senior Principal, Israel Berger and Associates

DESCRIPTION:

Integrated Design has been growing in fits and starts for many decades, though only today are the regulatory and economic motivators demanding that designers and developers respond to the pressures of what may otherwise seem common sense.  The practice of façade and curtain wall design, though young relative to the basic disciplines of structural engineering and architecture, is the field in which Integrated Design is making the most direct impact on our design practices and our buildings.  The experts of the panel will be available for what promises to be a lively discussion of the issues of Integrated Design as they relate to these projects and to professional practitioners around the world.

Mitsu Edwards and Peter Arbour will present the work of RFR Consulting Engineers, a Paris-based bureau d’etude founded by the late Peter Rice, which has specialized in the integration of architecture and engineering practices since the early 1980s.  Since its inception, RFR’s work has been characterized by a multi-disciplinary approach, bringing the collaborative and contradictory priorities of architects and engineers together within each project design team.  RFR – with international offices in Paris, France; Stuttgart, Germany; Shanghai, China; and Abu Dhabi, UAE – has been in the vanguard of envelope consulting with the inclusion of environmental, structural, and architectural innovations in its approach to every project.  The continuing expansion of disciplines within RFR has kept the company at the cutting edge of Integrated Design and its methodologies as practiced in Europe and throughout the world.

In recent years, RFR has been the façade consultant of the Tour Phare at La Defense in Paris by Morphosis Architects and the Elm Park Development in Dublin, Ireland by Bucholz McEvoy Architects.  Both projects will be discussed in detail with their respective architects.

Morphosis Architects will present their 300-meter Tour Phare tower for La Defense, Paris.  The project, laureate of a high-profile international design competition in 2007 is slated to begin construction in 2011.  Beginning with the competition entry and continuing throughout its development, the design of the tower has been guided by the precepts of Integrated Design, successfully negotiating the constraints of stringent environmental regulations, demands for user comfort, and a stunning architectural ambition, all within the context of the costs and risks of a large-scale, urban development.

Merritt Bucholz will discuss the work of his firm, the Dublin- and Berlin-based Bucholz McEvoy Architects, and, in particular, the Elm Park Development in Dublin, Ireland.  This prize-winning, mixed-use project comprises nine buildings, and has successfully realized an ambitious agenda of strategic siting, enhanced use of natural daylight and natural ventilation, and a radical reduction of energy consumption by mechanical systems.  A masterful example of architectural beauty and environmental performance, Elm Park stands as a challenge to designers of all disciplines.

William Logan is among the foremost building envelope designers in the world today.  As the Design Partner of Israel Berger and Associates, he has designed façades for Renzo Piano, Herzog de Meuron, Cesar Pelli and many other prominent, international architects.  He will present several of his projects that embody the principles of Integrated Design, from the Centre Pompidou in Paris, France to the new Columbia University Campus in New York City.

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Location & Hours

Metropolitan Pavilion &
The Altman Building
125 West 18th Street
New York City 10011



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Day 1: 10 am to 7 pm
Day 2: 10 am to 5 pm

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