Dominique Perrault’s DC Tower 1 now Austria’s tallest building

French firm Dominique Perrault Architecture has completed a 220-metre skyscraper with a folded glass facade in Vienna, which has now become Austria’s tallest building.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

DC Tower 1 was created by Dominique Perrault Architecture for a site on the eastern bank of the Danube, where it will be joined in 2016 by a smaller facing tower with a facade that will appear to mirror its undulating surface.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Rendered image of DC Tower 1 and the proposed DC Tower 2

The 58-storey tower containing offices, apartments, a hotel and a top-floor sky bar rises above a public plaza in the Austrian capital’s developing Donau City district.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

When the second tower is constructed it will be angled slightly so the space between the uneven facades of the two buildings will frame views of the city from the river.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

“The towers function as two pieces of a gigantic monolith that seems to have split into two unequal halves, which then open to create an arch with undulating and shimmering facades that bring the newly created public space to life in the void created there,” said Dominique Perrault.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

In contrast with the slick, straight-sided walls on three sides of the tower, the faceted facade creates a shifting pattern of light and shadow that animates the surface and lends it a rippling quality.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

“The visual qualities of the folded facade create a new way to read the skyline of Donau City, its undulations signalling the entry point of this new polarity,” said Perrault. “The folds contrast with the no-nonsense rigour of the other three facades, creating a tension that electrifies the public space at the tower’s base.”

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

At the rear of the tower, a staircase leads from an access road to a long building that acts as a publicly accessible entrance and drop-off area.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

A series of square metal canopies arranged around the building’s other elevations create a sheltered route across the plaza towards the entrance on the front facade.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

The interior was designed to have a raw, monumental quality, with structural elements including concrete columns and bracing beams left exposed.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Materials including metal and stone are used throughout the lobbies and circulation areas to enhance the building’s robust aesthetic.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Walls and ceilings are covered in glossy black panels that echo the slick reflective surface of the facade, while simple fluorescent tube lighting adds a suitably industrial detail.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Photography is by Michael Nagl, unless stated otherwise.

Here’s a project description from Dominique Perrault:


DC Tower 1

When an architect delivers a building it is always an extremely emotional moment, marked by the end of a long process of mediation, from absolute potentiality of early sketches to fine tuning in situ of final details. An actor, for a time, in the endless development of territories, the architect exits the scene. He hands over the controls to those he has been working for. This is the moment when architecture transitions from the intellectual, conceptual state to the fundamentally physical and real.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

In Vienna, these feelings are magnified by the iconic character and extreme visibility of the DC Tower 1, but also by the history that binds me to the project. One beginning twelve years ago, in 2002, when WED held an international competition for the development of the last remaining section of Donau City, and a history which continues to be written.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

From the start the project offered a site with incredible potential: an open terrain, facing Imperial Vienna, embedded in the geography of the Danube, lying on a plateau on the river’s eastern bank, like a bridgehead to two Viennas. But the site was not virgin territory as several previous projects had been conceived for it. So there was a conceptual “already there”, a thoroughly fascinating virtuality.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Photograph by Walter J.Sieberer

Very early on, what kindled my interest most in this site was the bridgehead with the rest of the Donau City district, with the river banks but also the conditions for breathing life into a public space on an esplanade. We took advantage of this commission to design a genuine entry gate to Donau City. Reversing objectives for earlier development projects envisaged here, WED specifications called for a decidedly mixed-use program, an indispensable condition for germinating the contemporary urban vibration we were proposing to create in and around the towers.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Photograph by Walter J.Sieberer

The towers function as two pieces of a gigantic monolith that seems to have split into two unequal halves, which then open to create an arch with undulating and shimmering façades that bring the newly created public space to life in the void created there. Dancing on their platform, the towers are slightly oriented toward the river to open a dialogue with the rest of the city, turning their backs on no one, neither the historic nor the new Vienna.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

Today, the first of the two towers is up and the result is quite amazing, thanks notably to the invaluable collaboration of the Hoffmann-Janz architecture office. The visual qualities of the folded façade create a new way to read the skyline of Donau City, its undulations signalling the entry point of this new polarity. The folds contrast with the no-nonsense rigour of the other three façades, creating a tension that electrifies the public space at the tower’s base.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

The façade’s folds give the tower a liquid, immaterial character, a malleability constantly adapting to the light, a reflection or an event. For interior spaces, on the other hand, with Gaëlle Lauriot-Prévost, the associate designer, we have tried to make the building very physical and present. The structure is not hidden, does not evade the eye. The exposed concrete framework is touchable. Stone and metal used in lobbies and circulations contribute to the tower’s generous and reassuring physicality.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

We have tried to avoid a tendency in contemporary architectural production to hide the architect’s real work, of sewing, suturing the project and contextualising and anchoring it in the environment. Design emerges in a later phase. Towers floating above the ground are too severe, like architectural objects, objects in themselves. They must land, take root in the soil of cities, in places where their urban substance is found. The aim is to get the basic horizontality of the city and the public space to coincide with vertical trajectories.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

The work on the base and foundation of the DC Tower 1 was highly stimulating. Architectural arrangements determine the tower’s relationship to the ground. On the back façade, the public space rises from the level of the esplanade in a series of staggered steps to reach the ground reference plane. This structuring of topography launches the tower and creates a spatial interface accessible to all, making the occurrence of such a physical object both possible and acceptable.

DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade

On the other three façades, metallic umbrellas gradually rise from the ground on the approach, softening the violence of the eruption and blending city and movement into the tower’s future. Important work on neighbourhood fringes remains to be done to reveal the geographic features of this urban landscape and take better advantage of the river bank.

Site plan of DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Site plan – click for larger image

With this first tower the city of Vienna has demonstrated that the punctual and controlled emergence of high-rises can participate in creating the city and produce contemporary, economical, high-energy performance mixed-use buildings adapted to metropolitan business requirements and lifestyles.

Detailed section of DC Tower 1 by Dominique Perrault Architecture features a faceted glass facade
Section – click for larger image

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now Austria’s tallest building
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Split View Mountain Lodge

Reiulf Ramstad Arkitekter ont conçu cette jolie maison de vacances privée, à Havsdalen en Norvège. Les baies vitrées donnent une belle vue sur les montagnes enneigées et l’ensemble du mobilier est en bois, de quoi apporter un peu de chaleur à l’atmosphère. Les photos sont signées Søren Harder Nielsen.

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London Eye-designer Marks Barfield Architects plans elevated glass pavilion next door

London-based Marks Barfield Architects has designed a temporary glazed pavilion raised up on criss-crossing steel columns that looks set be built near the firm’s London Eye observation wheel on the South Bank.

Shell Centre Pavilion by Marks Barfield

Marks Barfield Architects won an international competition to design the pavilion, intended to form part of the redevelopment of the current Shell Centre site. If granted planning permission, the four-storey building would house a marketing suite for the development as well as educational and visitor facilities.

“We chose local architects Marks Barfield for this building as they have already made a significant contribution to the South Bank with their world-renowned design of the London Eye,” said John Pagano of developers, Braeburn Estates.

Shell Centre Pavilion by Marks Barfield

“The high-quality designs they have proposed for the visitor pavilion will be in keeping with our aspiration for the Shell Centre scheme, and complement the South Bank’s cultural offer,” he added.

The 20-metre-high glazed building would be built on a plot at the edge of the recently redesigned Jubilee Gardens and would rise from a ten-square-metre base intended to minimise its footprint and impact on the landscaped public space.

Subsequent storeys would expand outwards to provide more floorspace for the meeting room and educational facilities housed on the first floor and showrooms for the flats proposed as part of the site’s redevelopment on the second and third floors.

Shell Centre Pavilion by Marks Barfield

Marks Barfield designed the pavilion to be dismantled and reused when no longer required at the Shell Centre site. A planning application submitted in relation to the pavilion is subject to the main development being approved.

“In the longer term, our proposed plans for the South Bank include the transformation of the Hungerford Car Park into a park which would result in the expansion of Jubilee Gardens by a third,” said Pagano.

“This would herald a major enhancement to the public areas adjacent to the new Shell Centre site with landscaped recreational space available for everyone to enjoy.”

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plans elevated glass pavilion next door
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Vertical Glass House in Shanghai

Des architectes chinois de l’atelier FCJZ ont mis 20 ans pour construire cette maison verticale en acier et béton à Shanghai. Le projet était de faire une maison de 4 étages avec des planchers en verre, offrant ainsi une visibilité d’une pièce à une autre. Une construction moderne à découvrir dans la suite de l’article.

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Vertical Glass 1

notNeutral GINO Glass Dripper: Made in collaboration with world-class baristas, this vessel helps you make the perfect cup of coffee at home

notNeutral GINO Glass Dripper


Known for their mugs and cups designed to provide optimal fluid dynamics (aka the best possible set-up for pouring and drinking coffee), the newest creation from notNeutral—a division of Rios…

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Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ has glass floors instead of windows

Glass floors allow residents to look down from a dining table into a toilet inside this windowless concrete house in Shanghai by Chinese firm Atelier FCJZ (+ slideshow).

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

Yung Ho Chang of Atelier FCJZ originally designed the Vertical Glass House as an urban housing prototype for a competition in 1991. Twenty-two years later, the studio was able to realise the project as part of the West Bund Biennale of Architecture and Contemporary Art.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

The building now functions as a guesthouse for visiting artists and architects. Closely based on the original design, the four-storey house has a glass roof and glass floors between each level, meaning that residents can look all the way up from the basement to the sky.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

According to project architect Lu Bai, the house is a 90-degree rotation of the typical glass houses completed during the Modernist period, placing more of an emphasis on spirituality and materials.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

“With enclosed walls and transparent floors as well as roof, the house opens to the sky and the earth, positions the inhabitant right in the middle, and creates a place for meditation,” he explained.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

A single steel column extends up through the exact centre of the building. Together with a series of criss-crossing joists, it dissects the floors into quarters that each accommodate different activities.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

On each floor, one of these quarters is taken up by a steel staircase that spirals down to the basement from a double-height second floor.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

The house’s austere concrete walls were cast against wooden formwork, which was left rough on the outside and sanded on the inside to give a contrast in texture between the facade and the interior walls.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

Each glass floor slots into a pair of narrow horizontal openings in the walls and the architects have added lighting along these junctions to create stripes of light on the building’s facades after dark.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

The overall footprint of the house is just 40 square metres.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ

Here’s a project description from Atelier FCJZ:


Vertical Glass House

Vertical Glass House was designed by Yung Ho Chang as an entry to the annual Shinkenchiku Residential Design Competition organised by the Japan Architect magazine in 1991. Chang received an Honorable Mention award for the project. Twenty-two years later in 2013, the West Bund Biennale of Architecture and Contemporary Art in Shanghai decided to build it as one of its permanent pavilions.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ
Basement plan

Vertical Glass House is a urban housing prototype and discusses the notion of transparency in verticality while serving as a critic of Modernist transparency in horizontality or a glass house that always opens to landscape and provides no privacy. While turning the classic glass house 90 degrees, Vertical Glass House is on one hand spiritual: with enclosed walls and transparent floors as well as roof, the house opens to the sky and the earth, positions the inhabitant right in the middle, and creates a place for meditation. On the other hand, Vertical Glass House is material: vertical transparency visually connects all the utilities, ductworks, furniture pieces on different levels, as well as the staircase, into a system of domesticity and provides another reading of the modern theory of “architecture as living machine”.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ
Ground floor plan

The structure erected in Shanghai in 2013 was closely based on the 22-years old design scheme by Chang and developed by the Atelier FCJZ. With a footprint of less than 40 square meters, the four-storey residence is enclosed with solid concrete walls leaving little visual connection to its immediate surrounding. The walls were cast in rough wooden formwork on the exterior and smooth boards on the interior to give a contrast in texture in surface from the inside out. Within the concrete enclosure, a singular steel post is at the centre with steel beams divide the space in quarters and frame each domestic activity along with the concrete walls.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ
First floor plan

All the floor slabs for the Vertical Glass House, which consists of 7cm thick composite tempered glass slabs, cantilevers beyond the concrete shell through the horizontal slivers on the facade. The perimeter of each glass slab is lit from within the house; therefore, light transmits through the glass at night to give a sense of mystic for the pedestrians passing by. All the furniture were designed specifically for the rooms inside the Vertical Glass House to be true to the original design concept and keep a cohere appearance with its structures and stairs. Air conditioning was added to the house.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ
Cross section

The Vertical Glass House will be operated by the West Bund Biennale as a one-room guest house for visiting artists and architects while serving as an architectural exhibition.

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ
Original drawings

Office: Atelier FCJZ
Principal Architect: Yung Ho Chang
Project Architect: Lu Bai
Project Team: Li Xiang Ting, Cai Feng

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ
Original drawings

Location: Xuhui District Longteng Road, Shanghai, China
Client: West Bund
Building Area: 170 m2 Structural
Type: Housing/Exhibition

Vertical Glass House by Atelier FCJZ
Original drawings

 

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glass floors instead of windows
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Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel camouflages with its surroundings

This house in the Dutch city of Almere by Swedish architect Johan Selbing and Swiss landscape architect Anouk Vogel is completely covered in reflective glass to allow it to blend in with its surroundings (+ slideshow).

Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel

Selbing and Vogel designed the private house for a plot in an experimental housing development in Almere – a city that was only established in 1976 but now has over 195,000 residents – in response to a competition brief calling for a building that would relate to a site within a forest clearing.

Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel

The house’s simple boxy shape is constructed from an aluminium frame that supports panels of toughened mirrored glass, with a mirrored composite panel running around the top and bottom edges of the facade.

Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel

“The Mirror House is a private villa with a facade consisting entirely of reflective glass, which acts as a camouflage and an obstruction of the view of its interior,” explained the architects.

Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel

Doors sits flush against the facade and are only noticeable thanks to handles that project from the surface and a change in the ground level that rises to meet the height of the floor inside the building.

Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel

An entrance at the the side of the building leads into a compact interior with a home office at one end and master and guest bedrooms at the other.

Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel

Sliding partitions between these rooms and the open-plan kitchen and living space can be opened or closed to meet different requirements.

“Long sight lines in the interior make the house appear larger from the inside, and anchor it to its surroundings,” the architects pointed out.

Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel

Surfaces are covered in pale birch multiplex panels that compliment the light-filled interior and views of the nearby trees.

Built-in storage covers one wall and is punctuated by a secret window that looks onto the street but is invisible from outside.

Site plan of Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel
Site plan – click for larger image

Selbing and Vogel were one of twelve winning entrants in the design competition. They were invited to construct their building but had to source a client to pay for it.

“In dialogue with the client, the competition proposal was worked out to the smallest detail, taking a demand for optimum accessibility into consideration,” the architects added.

Floor plan of Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel
Floor plan – click for larger image

Photography is by Jeroen Musch.

Here’s a project description from the architects:


Mirror House, Almere

The Mirror House is a private villa with a facade consisting entirely of reflective glass, which acts as a camouflage and an obstruction of the view of its interior. The floor plan has been designed to be as compact as possible, with the possibility to adapt to different lifestyles. All interior walls are covered with a birch multiplex panel, whose warm appearance contrasts with the elegant and strict glass facade.

Section of Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel
Section – click for larger image

After De Realiteit and De Fantasie, the third edition of small experimental housing settlements in Almere has been launched under the title De Eenvoud. The brief of the competition called for an individual house with a strong relation to its surroundings. The twelve winning teams were given the possibility to realise their designs in an open area in the forest of Noorderplassen-West, but had to find the buyers of the houses themselves.

Street facade elevation of Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel
Street facade elevation – click for larger image

The Mirror House is a private villa with a facade consisting entirely of reflective glass, which acts as a camouflage and an obstruction of the view of its interior. The floor plan has been designed to be as compact as possible, with the possibility to adapt to different lifestyles. In dialogue with the client, the competition proposal was worked out to the smallest detail, taking a demand for optimum accessibility into consideration.

Entrance facade elevation of Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel
Entrance facade elevation – click for larger image

The original concept with a slightly raised floor (for a better view), sliding doors, built-in cupboards and a single-level layout, has therefore been further refined. Long sight lines in the interior make the house appear larger from the inside, and anchor it to its surroundings. All interior walls are covered with a birch multiplex panel, whose warm appearance contrasts with the elegant and strict glass facade.

Garden facade elevation of Mirror House by Johan Selbing and Anouk Vogel
Garden facade elevation – click for larger image

Location: De Eenvoud, Almere, The Netherlands
Client: Private
Project team: Johan Selbing, Anouk Vogel
Size: 120 m2
Program: Private house
Process: competition 2006
Start construction: 2012
Completion: 2013
Structural Engineering: Buro voor Bouwadvies BV, Dalfsen
Installation Advice: Earth Energie Advies BV, Boskoop
Contractors: Bouwbedrijf Jadi BV, Genemuiden Slump Fictorie, Hoogeveen (facade)

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camouflages with its surroundings
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Glass Room in Chamonix

Inspiré par l’excellent projet Skywalk du Grand Canyon, le designer français Pierre-Yves Chays a imaginé à Chamonix un sol en verre permettant une vue à 360° impressionnante sur les Alpes. Un cube de verre du plus bel effet, à découvrir en détails et en images dans la suite de l’article.

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Glass Room in Chamonix

Miami Art Week 2013: Glass: Clear, crystalline and dynamic uses of an every day component

Miami Art Week 2013: Glass


Of all the materials put to use and on display during Miami’s art extravaganza, we saw several shimmering, shiny—but also innovative—works utilizing glass. Fragile, see-through and with the ability to morph light and color, it’s as multidimensional as it is straightforward. It completed…

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Glass Office in Shanghai

AIM Architecture a imaginé pour les nouveaux bureaux du building de Soho à Shanghai cet intérieur tout en verre et en miroirs. Donnant au lieu un maximum de lumière et une impression de double réalité, cet aménagement est situé dans le centre de la ville chinoise. Plus d’images dans la suite.

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Glass Office in Shanghai-7
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