By Shibani Punekar
Photography: Courtesy SWBI Architects
Read Time: 2 mins
Konterra by SWBI Architects
takes eco-friendly design to a new high with a terracotta and glass façade.
Following their signature
mantra of exploring newer materials and design techniques, architects Bina and
Sanjay Wadhwa of SWBI Architects Pvt. Ltd design an office building that is
both, spatially well planned and climatically responsive, besides its other
green features – clearly a gold-rated LEED certification in sustainable design.
Set for single or multiple commercial
tenancies, the 32,000 sq.ft. five-storey (four floors and a basement) building is spacious - minimum of
80% column free space flooded with ample natural light with access to
views from approx. 90% of its interiors. With approx. 6500 sq.ft. floor plate
area, each floor has a clear ceiling height of a whopping 13 ft. 4 inch!!
But the highlight is
incidentally, its façade! Shaping its identity, the unconventional approach to
the façade speaks highly of environmental and climatically responsive
architecture as an intuitive and sensitive approach to the exercise.
Being introduced in the
industrial hub of Udyog Vihas in Gurgaon, the unique external façade system comprises
imported terracotta clay tiles and a high performance hermetically sealed DGU
system with a SHDC index of value 0.24. This is combined with point fixed
glazing fin system with 1.52 mm PVB holding the sandwich glass together. This
arrangement provides the façade with an earthy tone, a warm palette and a world
class finish.
Terracotta effectively
plays skin to the brick and mortar body and allows for a ventilation shaft thus
forming a film of air between the façade and the actual building; becoming an
important feature that helps regulate the extreme Noida temperature by cooling the
interiors during summers and providing warmth during winters. What’s more,
permanent low maintenance exterior finishes are a bonus feature.
The terracotta facade
follows tenets of sustainability and
passive solar architecture norms; standing apart for its visual appeal, a
breath of fresh air from generic
glass and ACP facades. The building is due for completion in early 2017.
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