xerox building
Transcription
xerox building
XEROX BUILDING Avenida Infante Dom Henrique (Lisbon), Portugal, 1996 – 2001 WORKPLACES Location Avenida Infante Dom Henrique (Lisbon), Portugal Client Xerox Portugal, SA Programme Offices, dispatch and warehousing facilities Plot Size 8,880 sq.m Gross Built Area 24,800 sq.m Total Building Cost EUR 9,5M Construction Cost EUR 750.00 per sq.m Project Status 1996 to 1999 (design) – 1999 to 2001 (construction) Site plan Open courtyard www.promontorio.net XEROX BUILDING Avenida Infante Dom Henrique (Lisbon), Portugal, 1996 – 2001 Entrance West facade www.promontorio.net XEROX BUILDING Avenida Infante Dom Henrique (Lisbon), Portugal, 1996 – 2001 Southwest view Upper floor Ground floor Basement North facade South facade Section The building was designed on the outcome of the 1st prize on a short-list competition promoted by Xerox Portugal for its headquarters in Portugal. Given the busy traffic intersection of the plot, the building was devised in a U-shape, with two parallel wings of offices connected by a third block of equipments (auditorium, showroom, refectory, etc), around a large and enclosed void. www.promontorio.net With over 800 sq.m and 5-storey, the monumentality of this atrium endorses not only the needs for circulation and reception, but also the less evident need for silence and contemplation in the large corporation. Yet, and notwithstanding the growing tendency for privatisation of public space and renouncing to the restrictive notion of functionality of the real estate market, the eminently public character of this atrium allows us to anticipate that it will be a space of event, open to the city. The compositional system of both exterior and interior façades is based on a construction module repeatedly developed by PROMONTORIO. Its configuration endorses the idea of a heavyweight tectonic wherein a representational skeleton of prefabricated concrete panels visually holds the fragile elements–glass and alternatively wood or zinc. Endorsing the classical theme of post-and-lintel, the representational transposition of the idea of load runs across the building with this concrete skeleton resting on a heavy stereotomic granite plinth.