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Subsea 7 Campus Development, Westhill, Aberdeen, Building, Photo, Design, Property, Image
Development near Aberdeen, North East Scotland
Design by Michael Gilmour Associates
Proposed Consolidation of Premises for Subsea 7
4 Nov 2009
ABERDEENSHIRE CAMPUS FOR SUBSEA ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
Designed by Michael Gilmour Associates, the campus development
for one of the world's leading subsea engineering and construction
companies, Subsea 7, brings together over 800 staff on the edge
of the countryside at Westhill, on the outskirts of Aberdeen.

photos © Keith Hunter
The development was completed late in 2008 and has allowed Subsea
7 to consolidate its existing bases around Aberdeen at Dyce, Westhill
and Tullos. The building was planned from the outset to achieve a
"Very Good" BREEAM rating signifying its environmental credentials,
and consists of around 14,000sq.m. of accommodation, spread over four
storeys and distributed between wings which are arranged in a pinwheel
plan.
The development was conceived as a working village, with its own High
Street and Village Square. A linear atrium runs through its heart,
and is used as the main circulation route or "High Street".
There are a couple of squares along the route, one being the main
reception, the other a dining and presentation area or "Village
Square". This tiered restaurant can spill out onto an external
terrace during good weather. In fact, Subsea 7's staff are encouraged
to make use of the parkland landscaping, which extends beyond the
building's perimeter during lunch breaks and company functions and
allows the occupiers to exercise or just relax in peace and quiet.

photos © Keith Hunter
The working areas of the building are broken down into discrete
elements, each of which is connected directly to the High Street
and Square, encouraging casual meetings between separate groups.
This arrangement also allows for future flexibility whereby parts
can be added to, whilst breaking down the apparent scale of the
overall development. Open galleries, glass balustrades and fully
glazed offices make the most of this unique space, orientating each
part towards the building's High Street, and revealing its functions
to visitors.
Similarly, the combination of shallow plan wings, and the street-like
atrium with its fully-glazed roof, means that staff are never more
than nine metres distant from natural light - an important factor
in creating a healthy environment. Acting as a counterpoint to the
sheer skin of curtain walling around the atrium is the building's
envelope: it is clad in neutral solar-control glass, with giant
brises soleils which control solar heat gains and glare. These passive
energy measures, along with a displacement ventilation system and
chilled beam cooling, are key means of reducing energy consumption.
Hopes for the building's success in forthcoming design awards are
high, and the scheme has already attracted favourable comments from
its users and visitors.
Subsea 7 Campus Development Westhill images / information from Michael Gilmour Associates
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Michael Gilmour Associates is a medium-sized architectural practice, established
for thirty years and based in Aberdeen. MGA has a long track record in the
industrial and commercial sectors, with many commissions for blue chip clients,
including offshore oil companies. The practice has also pioneered zero-energy
housing, with a first-in-Scotland housing project in Laurencekirk, Aberdeenshire
which needs no central heating.
Subsea7 is one of the world's leading subsea engineering and construction
companies servicing the oil and gas industry. With over 5,500 personnel,
Subsea7 operates worldwide, focusing on undersea pipeline and umbilical
systems, and using a fleet of Subsea 7 is one of the world's leading subsea
engineering and construction companies offering all the expertise and
assets that make Subsea, Umbilical, Riser and Flowline (SURF) field development
possible. With a multi-national workforce in excess of 5,000 people worldwide,
the company's global offshore operations are supported out of the North
Sea, Africa, Brazil, North and Central America and Asia Pacific. technically
advanced ships and ROV's.
"BREEAM" is an environmental assessment method development
by the Building Research Establishment to measure a building's overall
impact on the environment.
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