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WSBE17 Hong Kong
WSBE17 Hong Kong: About WSBE17 Hong Kong With the theme of Transforming Our Built Environment through Innovation and Integration: Putting Ideas into Action, WSBE17 Hong Kong will bring together 1,800 green building advocates, policy-makers, academics, and industry practitioners THE MOST INFLUENTIAL from 50 countries. The three-day event includes conference sessions with top-notch speakers, and around 100 parallel sessions, GREEN BUILDING MEGA EVENT with an exhibition alongside. The Construction Industry Council and the Hong Kong Green Building Council jointly invite you to participate at the World Sustainable Built Environment Conference 2017 Hong Kong (WSBE17 About the Organisers Hong Kong) on 5-7 June 2017. The Construction Industry Council (CIC) was formed in 2007 under the Construction Industry Council Ordinance (Cap. 587). The CIC consists of a chairman and 24 members representing various sectors of the Pre-eminent Conference Series industry including employers, professionals, academics, contractors, workers, independent persons and Government officials. The Sustainable Built Environment (SBE) series began in 2000 and is now the pre-eminent international conference series on sustainable building and construction. The series operates on a three-year cycle with planning in year one, regional conferences The main functions of the CIC are to forge consensus on long-term strategic in year two and a global conference in year three. Albeit strong competition, Hong Kong won the hosting right of the 2015- issues, convey the industry’s needs and aspirations to Government, provide training and registration for the construction 2017 cycle global conference, which will conclude the conference cycle by embracing all the top findings from the 20 regional workforce and serve as a communication channel for Government to solicit advice on all construction-related matters. -
BRG 18 Preliminary Inventory ______
_____________________________________________________________________ WOODS BAGOT ARCHITECTS PTY. LTD BRG 18 Preliminary Inventory __________________________________________________________________ Edward Woods (1837-1913) arrived in South Australia during 1860 and began working for the architect Edmund Wright. He helped design the GPO and Town Hall before starting out on his own in 1869; his first commission being St. Peter's Cathedral. By 1884, he had been appointed the colony's Architect-in-chief, and was an inaugural member of the S.A. Institute of Architects formed in 1886. Walter Bagot (1880-1963), a grandson of Henry Ayers and a student of St. Peter's College, became articled to Woods in 1899. He later studied architecture in London before entering into partnership with Woods in 1905. The following year, Bagot assisted with the formation of the first school of architecture in Adelaide, under the auspices of the School of Mines. Herbert Jory, James Irwin and Louis Laybourne-Smith joined the practice as partners in ensuing years; Laybourne-Smith (1880-1965) was also Head of the School of Architecture for 40 years and instrumental in its foundation. Woods Bagot have been a very influential in South Australia, with early emphasis on traditional styles and in ecclesiastical architecture. The firm designed Elder House, the Trustee Building, Bonython Hall, Barr Smith Library, the War Memorial, Carrick Hill and a number of churches in Adelaide and the country. Later commissions included John Martins, the Bank of NSW, CML and Da Costa Buildings, ANZ Bank and the Elizabeth City Centre, while more recent examples include Standard Chartered, Commonwealth Bank, Telecom and Mutual Health buildings. -
A Symposium Exploring Digital Architectural and Built Environment Records
Born digital: a symposium exploring digital architectural and built environment records WORKSHOP PRESENTERS AND PRESENTATION SUMMARIES Monday 18 April 2016 Morning Session 9am-12.30pm Venue: Council Room, Hawke Building Level 5 Welcome and Introduction Assoc Prof Christine Garnaut, Director: Architecture Museum, School of Art Architecture and Design, University of South Australia E: [email protected] Archaeology of the Digital and born-digital archives at CCA Tim Walsh, Digital Archivist, Canadian Centre for Architecture, Montreal The last few decades have seen radical changes in the tools, education, and practice of architecture and design. Archaeology of the Digital is part of a multi-year research project launched by the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA) to investigate the development and use of computers in architecture, and the first step in the CCA’s strategic objective of creating a collection of digital architecture. The project, spanning a period of three years and including exhibitions, seminars, public programs and publications, has fostered research around two crucial under-addressed topics: how to collect, preserve, and catalogue born-digital architectural archives, and how to make this material accessible to the public and to researchers. Tim Walsh will share details and experiences from the project, and speak to the opportunities and challenges of archiving born-digital files of architecture and design. Tim Walsh is the Digital Archivist at the Canadian Centre for Architecture, an international research centre and museum in Montreal dedicated to the study of architecture as a public concern. He holds an MS in Library and Information Science from Simmons College, where he concluded his studies with a research paper entitled “Preservation and Access of Born-Digital Architectural Design Records in an OAIS-Type Archive,” and a BA in English from the University of Florida. -
CTBUH Journal
About the Council The Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, based at the Illinois Institute of CTBUH Journal Technology in Chicago, is an international International Journal on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat not-for-profi t organization supported by architecture, engineering, planning, development, and construction professionals. Founded in 1969, the Council’s mission is to disseminate multi-disciplinary information on Tall buildings: design, construction, and operation | 2013 Issue III tall buildings and sustainable urban environments, to maximize the international interaction of professionals involved in creating the built environment, and to make the latest Case Study: The Bow, Calgary knowledge available to professionals in a useful form. Debating Tall: Do Trees Belong on Skyscrapers? The CTBUH disseminates its fi ndings, and Imagining the Tall Building of the Future facilitates business exchange, through: the publication of books, monographs, The Use of Stainless Steel in Second-Skin Façades proceedings, and reports; the organization of world congresses, international, regional, and Politics, History, and Height in Warsaw specialty conferences and workshops; the maintaining of an extensive website and tall Using CFD to Optimize Tall Buildings building databases of built, under construction, and proposed buildings; the distribution of a Tall Building in Numbers: Vanity Height monthly international tall building e-newsletter; the maintaining of an Talking Tall: Tall Timber Building international resource center; the bestowing of annual awards for design and construction Special Report: CTBUH 2013 London Conference excellence and individual lifetime achievement; the management of special task forces/ working groups; the hosting of technical forums; and the publication of the CTBUH Journal, a professional journal containing refereed papers written by researchers, scholars, and practicing professionals. -
Exhibition Report Thank You
19 FEBRUARY – 22 MAY 2016 EXHIBITION REPORT THANK YOU Museum of Brisbane acknowledges the support of Museum of Brisbane Board many organisations and individuals who helped bring to life Living in the city: New architecture in Brisbane Sallyanne Atkinson ao, Chairman & the Asia-Pacific. The exhibition was spawned by the Andrew Harper inaugural Asia Pacific Architecture Forum, a joint initiative Jeff Humphreys ofArchitecture Media and State Library of Queensland. Alison Kubler The Museum is grateful to these organisations and Chris Tyquin particularly wishes to recognise the invaluable guidance David Askern (Company Secretary) of Architecture Media’s Cameron Bruhn. The Museum also acknowledges the support of Audi Centre Brisbane as Museum Partner, Hilton Hotel Brisbane as Accommodation Partner, and Media Partner’s goa, 612 ABC Brisbane and The Weekend Edition. It is only with the support of these organisations that the Museum can deliver award-winning exhibitions free for the community. Museum Partner Accommodation Partner Media Partners Exhibition Supporters Living in the city is co-presented with Architecture Media Life at Home: Richard Kirk Architect, Courtyard Residence 2015, as part of Asia Pacific Architecture Forum. architectural illustration Cover: Making Communities: HASSELL, Shenzhen Affordable Housing Design 2012, architectural rendering FAST FACTS 75,334 people visited Museum of Brisbane during the exhibition Making Communities: The University of Queensland Student Housing 6 public programs Precinct, St Lucia, Wilson Architects -
AUSTRALIAN ROMANESQUE a History of Romanesque-Inspired Architecture in Australia by John W. East 2016
AUSTRALIAN ROMANESQUE A History of Romanesque-Inspired Architecture in Australia by John W. East 2016 CONTENTS 1. Introduction . 1 2. The Romanesque Style . 4 3. Australian Romanesque: An Overview . 25 4. New South Wales and the Australian Capital Territory . 52 5. Victoria . 92 6. Queensland . 122 7. Western Australia . 138 8. South Australia . 156 9. Tasmania . 170 Chapter 1: Introduction In Australia there are four Catholic cathedrals designed in the Romanesque style (Canberra, Newcastle, Port Pirie and Geraldton) and one Anglican cathedral (Parramatta). These buildings are significant in their local communities, but the numbers of people who visit them each year are minuscule when compared with the numbers visiting Australia's most famous Romanesque building, the large Sydney retail complex known as the Queen Victoria Building. God and Mammon, and the Romanesque serves them both. Do those who come to pray in the cathedrals, and those who come to shop in the galleries of the QVB, take much notice of the architecture? Probably not, and yet the Romanesque is a style of considerable character, with a history stretching back to Antiquity. It was never extensively used in Australia, but there are nonetheless hundreds of buildings in the Romanesque style still standing in Australia's towns and cities. Perhaps it is time to start looking more closely at these buildings? They will not disappoint. The heyday of the Australian Romanesque occurred in the fifty years between 1890 and 1940, and it was largely a brick-based style. As it happens, those years also marked the zenith of craft brickwork in Australia, because it was only in the late nineteenth century that Australia began to produce high-quality, durable bricks in a wide range of colours. -
To Download a PDF of an Interview with A. Eugene Kohn, Chairman
NEWYORKCITY Teamwork and Collaboration An Interview with A. Eugene Kohn, Chairman, Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates EDITORS’ NOTE On July 4, 1976, mixed-use projects, both in the United A. Eugene Kohn founded Kohn States and abroad. More than 100 of Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF), the fi rm’s completed projects are cer- alongside William Pedersen and tifi ed, or pursuing, green certifi cation. Sheldon Fox, with a commitment to outstanding design, quality of What are the key ingredients that execution, and exceptional client make for a great architecture fi rm? service. Since starting the fi rm, we have The Founding Partners wanted strongly believed in teamwork and to create a fi rm that would succeed collaboration as opposed to stressing Overall, the key ingredients that have proved well past their own tenures. With the star architect or individual. The our fi rm successful is an outstanding staff, excep- this in mind, they sought talented reality is that one architect cannot con- tional design talent, opportunities with excellent people who could be as good, and A. Eugene Kohn ceive all the projects that a fi rm might clients, and the successful execution of projects. ideally better, than themselves. do and develop the design alone; it How can the older buildings in New These employees, mentored by the founders, is truly a team effort. On any given project, we York City compete with all of the new prod- would be the next leaders at KPF – and hold the might have as many as 60 people working on it, uct available? responsibility of doing the same for following guided by design leadership, all while assuring First off, at a basic level, older buildings generations. -
Aesthetics of Chinese Tall Buildings Author
CTBUH Research Paper ctbuh.org/papers Title: Aesthetics of Chinese Tall Buildings Author: Richard Lee, Junior Partner, C.Y. Lee & Partners Architects/Planners Subjects: Architectural/Design History, Theory & Criticism Keyword: Cultural Context Publication Date: 2019 Original Publication: 2019 Chicago 10th World Congress Proceedings - 50 Forward | 50 Back Paper Type: 1. Book chapter/Part chapter 2. Journal paper 3. Conference proceeding 4. Unpublished conference paper 5. Magazine article 6. Unpublished © Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat / Richard Lee Aesthetics of Chinese Tall Buildings Abstract Richard Lee CTBUH Regional Representative Partner While Western aesthetics dominate the world at this time, the rise of the East has led China to re- C.Y. Lee & Partners Architects/ examine its Eurocentric view towards aesthetics. China has been long been a fertile laboratory Planners for foreign architects to create exciting and wild structures, but this explosion has led to an Taipei, Taiwan, China urban landscape littered with tall buildings that have little, if anything to do with the indigenous Richard Lee received a bachelor’s and master’s cultural heritage. This dilemma came to the forefront in Taiwan when it envisioned creating a degree from the University of Pennsylvania. world-class supertall building that would serve as a “coming-out” to the world stage. Instead After graduation, he worked at KPF in New York, followed by Handel Architects. In 2004, Lee moved of employing a foreign architect, they chose a native Chinese architect. Drawing from Chinese to Shanghai to join C.Y. Lee & Partners. After 2006, aesthetics and sensibilities, the resulting TAIPEI 101 showed that a building could resonate with he relocated to the main office in Taipei, where the indigenous population and culture in a deeply spiritual way, while simultaneously instilling a he was promoted to junior partner in 2016. -
Deakin Research Online
Deakin Research Online This is the published version: Jones, David 2011, Bagot, Walter, in The encyclopedia of Australian architecture, Cambridge University Press, Port Melbourne, Vic., pp.60-60. Available from Deakin Research Online: http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30041726 Reproduced with the kind permission of the copyright owner. Copyright: 2011, Cambridge University Press in Domestic Architecture in Australia (1919), Some nineteenth BAGOT, WALTER century Adelaide architects (1958), 'Early Adelaide architecture' WALTER Hervey Bagot (1880- 1963) was born in North (1953-8), edited Reveries in retrospect (1946), written by his Adelaide, son of a prominent stockbroker and pastoralist. He wife,]osephine Margaret Barritt, and regularly lectured on was apprenticed in 1899 to Edward Woods, later studying Italian painting at the Art Gallery of SA. He was the recipient architecture at King's College, London (1902- 5). Upon his of a Worshipful Company of Carpenters silver medal (1903), return to Adelaide in 1905, Woods offered him a partnership, RIBA associateship (1904) and FRIBA (1926); served as RAIA establishing the practice Woods Bagot (later known variously (SA) President (1917-19), was elevated to LFRAIA (1960); as Woods Bagot Laybourne-Smith & Irwin). Described as a and created a Cavaliere Ordine al Merito della Repubblica Italiana 'master of architectural detail, both classic and medieval', he (Knight of the Order of Merit of the Republic ofItaly) in 1962 was passionate about classical and traditional designs, especially for services to the Australian- Italian Association. northern Italian architecture. He spending many summers DAV ID JONES there, embracing, in his writings and designs, the climatic relevance and appropriateness of this style for Adelaide and its J. -
Shanghai World Financial Center Loads from Wind and Earthquake
The Shanghai World Financial Center ® Welding Brilliant Architecture To Imaginative Engineering Copyright©Copyright By Leslie E. Robertson, Hon.M.ASCE, NAE, F.IStructE, C.E., P.E., S.E. and SawTeen See, Hon.M.ASCE, C.E., P.E. his is an extraordinary building, one that will attract the eye of 15%, and an increase in overturning moment from wind forces of all in Shanghai. Making use of a composite, steel and concrete approximately 25%. Tmega-structure, the structural system is organized to respond to Making use of reusable followers, concrete-filled steel pipe friction the beauty of the architecture while meeting extraordinary engineer- piles at minimum spacing had been driven from the ground surface, ing challenges. While no two floors are identical, considerable repeti- with the top of piling at the anticipated bottom elevation of the mat tion is found in the concrete walls and steel framing. [17.5 meters (-58 feet)]. Providing temporary support for the mat and The building will be mixed-use, withDRAFT a museum at the base, a below-grade concrete floors, for top-down construction, steel H-piles hotel at the top, and office spaces in between. Above the hotel will extended from some of the piling to the ground surface. In part be- be a visitor’s center, while much of the area below grade will house cause the pile cut-off was well below grade, the cost of reinforcing mechanical parking. magazinethe existing piling was high. LERA determined that the installed pile History foundation system could accept a larger building, only by decreasing S T R U Cthe weight of Tthe original buildingU by more thanR 10% and by Eredis- With development by Mori Building Company and Kohn Pedersen tributing the loads to the piling so as to accept the increased lateral Fox as the Architect, designs for the Shanghai World Financial Center loads from wind and earthquake. -
Shanghai World Financial Center
ctbuh.org/papers Title: Case Study: Shanghai World Financial Center Authors: Paul Katz, Principal, Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates Leslie Robertson, Principal, Leslie E. Robertson Associates Subjects: Architectural/Design Building Case Study Structural Engineering Keywords: Design Process Mega Column Structure Publication Date: 2008 Original Publication: CTBUH Journal, 2008 Issue II Paper Type: 1. Book chapter/Part chapter 2. Journal paper 3. Conference proceeding 4. Unpublished conference paper 5. Magazine article 6. Unpublished © Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat / Paul Katz; Leslie Robertson Case Study: Shanghai World Financial Center From the onset of the Shanghai World Financial Center project, its developers targeted a cutting-edge, mixed use mega-complex that would serve a multitude of tenant lifestyle demands. When a desire to change the building size surfaced after the foundation was put in place, it was up to the structural designer to come up with a new approach to the building systems in order to keep the project on track. Following a substantial and fast-paced reconfiguration of the building’s structural design, the project team achieved a taller building without compromising the capability of the original foundation to support it. A discussion of the design process of the building and its cutting edge features follows. Paul Katz Leslie E. Robertson Authors 1Paul Katz, FAIA 2Leslie Earl Robertson, NAE, Dist.M.ASCE, F.IStructE, CE, PE, SE, 2SawTeen See, Dist.M.ASCE, CE, PE 1Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates 111 West 57th Street New York, NY 10019 t: +1 212 977 6500 f: +1 212 956 2526 e: [email protected] 2Leslie E. -
Innovative Electrical Engineering for a Low Carbon City
THE HONG KONG INSTITUTION OF ENGINEERS ELECTRICAL DIVISION The 30th Annual Symposium Thursday 18th October 2012 INNOVATIVE ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING FOR A LOW CARBON CITY at Ballroom Sheraton Hotel Nathan Road Kowloon Hong Kong SYMPOSIUM PROGRAMME 08.30 Registration and Coffee 09.00 Welcome Address – Ir Albert W.K. To Chairman, Electrical Division, The HKIE 09.05 Opening Address – Ir Raymond K.S. Chan Senior Vice President, The HKIE 09.10 Keynote Speech – Mr Liam G. O’Sullivan Programme Director Low Carbon London, UK 1. Green Power System Development 09.40 Operation & Maintenance Initiatives and Practices of the Standalone PV System on Town Island – Mr Raymond Ho, Engineer I – Mr Wilson K.W. Chan, Engineer II East & West Region CLP Power Hong Kong Limited 10.00 Contributing Towards a Low Carbon City – Green Initiatives by HK Electric – Ir Raymond W.M. Choi Chief Customer Services Engineer The Hongkong Electric Co. Ltd. 10.20 Discussion 10.40 Coffee Break - 1 - 2. Innovative Projects and Initiatives 11.10 Generation Dispatch Methodology under Low Carbon Emission Scenario – Dr Y.H. Hou Assistant Professor Department of Electrical & Electronic Engineering University of Hong Kong 11.30 Zero Carbon Building and its Key Carbon Neutrality Strategies – Ir Dr G.Y. Li Senior Manager (Research) Construction Industry Council – Ir Dr Raymond M.H. Yau, Director Ove Arup & Partners Hong Kong Ltd. 11.50 Latest Technologies of Lighting Design to Achieve Low Carbon Living – Mr Kelon K.K. Yan Manager, Lighting Division Megaman (HK) Electrical & Lighting Ltd. 12.10 Discussion 12.30 Lunch 3. Energy Efficient Railway System 14.10 Fully Automatic Operation (FAO) System Design in South Island Line (East) Project – Ir C.L.