The business center designed by Andrew Romanov and Ekaterina Kuznetsova continues the "green" line of ADM Bureau projects that implement the ideas of interaction and mutual respect between architecture and nature.
The construction site is located in the western part of Moscow region, not far from Sheremetevo 2
international airport, in the woodland that is so far situated far away from
any houses or infrastructure but, thanks to its vicinity to the federal highway,
is sure to start developing pretty soon. Last year, there was a tender for the
concept of its housing development. Among other competitors, on the list dominated
by foreugn companies, there was ADM Bureau that ultimately came out as a
winner.
The commissioner gave the architects a challenging but at the same time
interesting urban ask - to create literally from scratch and on a vacant plot of
land a grand-scale and fully functioning business center with up-to-date
European-standard offices, meant supposedly for international companies, a
hotel, and a spacious parking garage. All of this was to be positioned at a
land site of a rather sophisticated configuration, whose layout vaguely
resembles a giraffe or maybe a dinosaur with its neck pointed northeast. The
long and narrow "neck", due to its peculiar dimensions, was the most
challenging part of the territory because any building that would have been
built here would have looked cut off from the other buildings.
This is why ADM architects proposed to divide the construction site into
two areas. In one of them they concentrated all the significant objects of the
complex; in the other, they placed a multi-level parking garage. Considering
the requirement to keep intact as many trees that were there on the construction
site as possible, it was decided that the parking garage will be of the
above-ground type. As a result the six-level garage safely occupied the
"problem" part of the territory, providing the number of parking stalls
necessary for the business center of such magnitude.
As far as the main southwest area is concerned, Andrew Romanov and
Ekaterina Kuznetsova proposed, instead of a standard business center, a concept
of a small but cozy and self-sufficient town, carefully and harmoniously
inscribed into the woodland. The utter absence of civilization around it made
it necessary to create a developed space inside of it. And this is how the idea
of a wide pedestrian boulevard suggested itself. It starts off from the public
transportation stop, directly behind which the reception area is situated - it
is a transparent, wall-to-ceiling glass oval-shaped building (this technique,
the entrance area with transparent walls, and hence friendly, the architects
mastered a few years ago, while designing a building in the Nastavnichesky
Alley). Getting through the reception, the visitor finds himself under a tall
and picturesquely winding awning that covers the entire space of the boulevard
from beginning to end.
Glass reception. View of the complex from the road. The paved road, very much like a river, flowing gracefully amidst the
slender pine trees, covers the office tower sites in intricate waves, reaches
out like a river branch to the parking garage, touches, like a wave with the
edge of its crest, the square site of the hotel, and finally just as gracefully
and smoothly returns to its starting point, completing the circle. Inside the
circle, a plot of pine forest is left intact.
Masterplan
The topside of the awning above the promenade is covered with grass, and
at some places rocks are strewn around, the legacy of the Zen garden. Thus the
offices above will command a view of the wide green strip of land, pierced with
the trunks of pine trees - nothing short of the dream of a science fiction
romantic - a green, multi-level city. Meanwhile, there is a world going on
under the "green blanket". Here and there the boulevard is livened up
by street cafes, small shops, recreation places - in a word, this IS a real
city street, a place where people meet and communicate. The promenade serve not
only the practical communication purpose but also, green and improved, filled
with public spaces, street furniture and lamps, forms the human scale of the
perception of this complex. The streets unites and connects all the buildings
making them live and work in a single rhythm - in the rhythm of the city. And,
nevertheless, inspire of the bustling activity on the boulevard, and even in
spite of the fact that now and then VIP's cars will drive through it, it look a
lot more like a park or a forest - natural, picturesque, with plenty of trees. The
architects preserve the trees that grow in the middle of the carriage way,
carefully "leading" their trunks up through the round openings in the
green awning. The pillars that support the roof at different angles, in turn,
echo the tree trunks as if insisting on them being a part of the surrounding
pine forest too.
Street under the wavy awning The centerpiece of the complex actually consists of seven glass towers
of a rectangular layout that lets to make the most of the land site. Their
rooftops are strikingly "cut off" in a diagonal line, the tallest
tower being 75 meter
high. On the facades the glass asymmetrically alternates with the rectangles of
the wooden panels: this makes the towers look a little more diverse and at the
same time "warmer". Six high-rises are occupied by offices and are
placed in pairs opposite to one another along the ring of the Main Street. The
seventh, placed at some distance, in the northeast protrusion of the site and
facing the highway, is meant to be an international-class hotel.
The wall-to-ceiling windows on the facades will let the office workers
enjoy the scenery. This, however, was not enough for the authors of the
project. According to Andrew Romanov, they wanted to literally integrate the
glass high-rises into the forest, in spite of the fact that they tower
incomparably higher that the tallest trees. Trying to enhance the participation
effect, the architects supplied the austere volumes of the towers with
cantilevers that overhang above the trees from the side of the promenade. The
cantilevers are occupied by meeting rooms with wall-to-ceiling windows. It will
sure take one's breath away to be inside such a space because of the feeling of
flight: the meeting room literally hovers above the forest. Its interior will
be, on the one hand, open to the natural surroundings and to the sky; on the
other hand, one can clearly feel the theme of overcoming the nature, and, above
all, the power of gravity; it is a mixed motif of admiring the landscape and
the technical power of man that has risen above the treetops in his "space
capsule".
Meeting rooms inside the cantilevers
Cantilevers. Hanging in space.
Thus the architects of ADM grow a forest of skyscrapers amidst the pine
trees. Particularly impressive is the combination of unabashed
"office" technical architecture of the glass towers with their
cantilevers suspended in space, and the architects' attention to detail, to the
grass and the trees, and to the quality of the public space, open to people and
nature, high-tech and naturally calm at the same time. ADM architects have been
exploring these themes for the past few years: right now the bureau is
finishing the construction of a few office complexes, each of which combines
lightweight up-to-date architecture, careful treatment of each and every tree
or bush that happens to be there on the construction site, and - and this is
particularly important - quite unusual, by Moscow standards, quality of
designing the improvement items (street furniture, footbridges, street lights,
and various types of grass), in other words, a serious and professional
approach to organizing the environment of the business parks being created. Fed
with the nourishment of a large-scale countryside project, these positive qualities
grew to the fullest. No wonder this project won an international contest. None
None
None
None
None
None
None
None
|