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Wimbledon Retractable Roof, London Building, Project, News, Design, Property
Wimbledon Retractable Roof London : Information
Wimbledon Centre Court - New Roof System in London, England, UK
Wimbledon Retractable
Roof - Centre Court + Museum + Offices
2009
Populous - formerly HOK Sport Venue Event
Client : All England Club
Structure : hydraulic operation
Material: translucent fabric - Tenara, 40% transparent
Supports : steel trusses
Fabric supplier: W.L. Gore & Associates, Germany
Structural Engineer: Capita Symonds
Centre Court Retractable Roof in place:

Wimbledon Retractable Roof image : AELTC
Time to close the roof: max. 10 minutes
Default position: open
Air control: 600 air distributors pump dry air into Centre Court to
prevent condensation and excessive humidity
Unveiled: Centre Court Celebration event, 17 May 2009
Original building dates from 1922, south facade retained
Wimbledon in southwest London is the world's premier tennis event
and takes place every Summer in June.
Wimbledon Centre Court:

Wimbledon Retractable Roof image : AELTC
Previously:
Centre Court Retractable Roof
Final phase of plan to transform the Centre Court
London, UK, Tuesday 21 April 2009: The All England Club, Wimbledon,
confirmed today that its new Centre Court retractable roof is on schedule
to be ready in time for the Centre Court Celebration matches on Sunday
17 May, when Andre Agassi, Stefanie Graf, Tim Henman and Kim Clijsters
will be the first players to play under the new structure.
Final testing of the roof and air-management system is being carried
out.
The air-management system has a vital role in controlling and stabilising
the internal environment within the bowl - essentially controlling
humidity and preventing either condensation on the inside of the roof
or sweating of the grass - either of which would make the court slippery
and unsuitable for play.
Ian Ritchie, Chief Executive of the All England Club, said: "We
set out to make Wimbledon the world's premier tennis event; the tournament
the players most want to win, the tournament spectators most want
to come to and the tournament everyone wants to watch.
"The new Centre Court roof project has been a sophisticated engineering
feat. Much of the testing is complete and we are now making final
adjustments ahead of the Centre Court Celebration event on 17 May.
That event is an important part of the testing procedure and will
enable us to see how both the roof and air-management system actually
perform under live conditions with a capacity crowd."
Wimbledon Centre Court Retractable Roof - Technical Information
8 Litres per second of fresh air per person pumped into the bowl to
manage the environment
9 Chiller units required to cool the air
10 Minutes (maximum) that the roof takes to close
10 Trusses holding up the roof
16 Metres - height of the roof above the court surface
30 Minutes - maximum time expected before play can start/continue
after the roof is closed and the internal environment is controlled
and stabilised
43 Miles per hour - wind speed up to which the roof can be deployed/retracted
77 Metres - the span of the moving roof trusses (width of football
pitch = 68m)
70 Tonnes - weight of each of the 10 trusses without extra parts
100 Tonnes - weight of each of the 10 trusses with all extras - eg
motors, locking arms
100 Percent of the roof's fabric which is recyclable
214 MM per second - maximum speed of truss deployment
1,200 Extra seats installed in 2008
3,000 Tonnes - combined weight (both fixed and moving) of the roof
5,200 Square metres, area of retractable roof when fully deployed
7,500 Wimbledon umbrellas, needed to cover the same area as the retractable
roof
15,000 Maximum spectator capacity
143,000 Litres per second - total amount of conditioned air that the
air-management system supplies to the bowl
290million Tennis balls - number that could fit in the Centre Court
with the roof closed
Wimbledon Centre Court Retractable Roof - System Information
- Type of folding fabric concertina, which allows the roof to be folded
into a very compressed area when not in use.
- Fabric (Tenara) is a special waterproof structural material that
is very strong, highly flexible and at 40% translucent is not transparent
for players/spectators but will let in natural light. Around 5,200
square metres of fabric used.
- Key element of the design allows natural light to reach the grass
- brought about by re-contouring the fixed roof
- An airflow system removes condensation from within the bowl to provide
good court surface conditions conducive to the playing of tennis when
the roof is closed.
- Roof is divided into two sections, with a total of nine bays of
tensioned fabric - four bays in one section and five in the other.
Each of the nine bays of tensioned fabric is clamped on either side
to prismatic steel trusses. There are 10 trusses spanning approximately
77 metres across the court. Ends of each truss are supported by a
set of bogies that move along parallel tracks positioned at either
side within the new 'fixed' roof.
- In preparation for closing the roof, one section is parked in its
folded state at the north end of the court while the other is parked
at the south end.
- The coordinated electro mechanical movement moves the trusses apart
and, at the same time, unfolds and stretches out the fabric between
the trusses over the court until the two sections meet in an overlapping
seam above the middle of the court.
- The arch shape to the tops of the trusses helps the structure to
withstand their own dead weight and loading from elements such as
snow and wind when the roof is stretched and closed over the court.
- The roof has been designed to close in a maximum of 10 minutes.
If the roof is being closed for rain, court covers will protect the
grass in the usual way while closure is in progress.
- After the roof has been closed, play can resume after a period of
around 30 minutes, depending on climatic conditions.
Countdown to a new Centre Court - The Roof Timetable
Championships Activity
2001
Centre Court Clubhouse renovated, new balconies added
Centre Court South Stand terracing replaced
Royal Box, TV/radio commentary boxes refurbished
2002
Centre Court terracing rows A-H replaced
2003
Gate 3: Demolition of old Wimbledon Museum Shop, Barclays Bank and
turnstiles to make way for new Museum Building including Club offices
January 2004 " Announcement of new Centre Court retractable roof,
increase in capacity to 15,000, new wider padded seats (470mm seat
spacing) and new restaurants/bars for public and debenture holders
2004
Gate 3: Museum, Turnstile and Club Offices building concrete structure
complete to ground floor level
New ticket booths operational from Church Road
2005
Gate 3: Museum, Turnstile and Museum Building (Club Offices) concrete
structure continues
Diversion of essential services under and around Centre Court
Centre Court terracing (rows J-T) replaced
Design work on the new roof, North and East Stands well advanced
2006
Enabling and infrastructure works start to strengthen the court foundations
and prepare for air-management system
AELTC staff relocate to Gate 3 Museum Building (Dec 2005)
New Museum opens (Apr 2006)
2007-09
Roof model testing carried out in Rotherham
2007
Demolition of East Stand and old Club offices
Removal of existing roof
Piling and construction of new East Stand frame and floors
East Stand rebuilt and terraces operational
No roof on Centre Court
Extra six rows of terracing completed
Centre Court restaurants/bars in situ but not open - used as rain
shelters
2008
Installation of new fixed roof
East Stand building finished and fully operational
Refurbished North Stand including Centre Court Debenture Rooms operational
Completion of new public and debenture facilities within East and
North Stands, including enhanced and extended dining/lounge areas
for Centre Court Debenture Holders and 400-seat Wingfield Restaurant
for public, 10 new hospitality suites
Capacity rises to 15,000 with addition of 1200 new seats
Installation of the first two moving roof trusses
No.2 Court shell complete
2009
Completion of moving roof trusses
Erection and completion of moving roof
Fit fabric covering to sliding roof
Commissioning and testing of roof and environment of Centre Court.
Construction of new permanent Gatehouses at Gates 4 and 5
Retractable roof and air-management system operational.
All new wider, padded and more comfortable seats installed on Centre
Court
No.2 Court complete and operational
Wimbledon Centre Court Retractable Roof - Additional Information
The new Centre Court roof comprises two distinct roof forms: the main
fixed roof to the perimeter of the Court which is surmounted by a
translucent retractable steel and fabric "concertina like"
structure.
The design for the fixed perimeter is modelled on the 1922 dodecahedron
form which provides the distinct intimate Centre Court atmosphere
with a droop down leading edge to focus spectators' eyes to the action
on the grass court. The use of the translucent fabric for the retractable
element affords natural light into the arena and in part retains the
open-to-air quality of the 1920's stadium.
The relatively lightweight steel truss and fabric retractable roof
is set above the fixed perimeter roof so as not to impinge on the
spectators' view and perception of the grass court in either the open
or closed mode. It also retains the 1922 dodecahedron roof form when
viewed from the terraces below.
The roof is designed to provide appropriate playing conditions when
the roof is deployed in adverse summer weather conditions; specifically:-
- Light - the translucent Tenara fabric will permit adequate levels
of light for play in most daylight conditions; where natural light
fails to meet the levels required, it is supplemented by a bespoke
design sports lighting system (permanently installed on the trusses),
which has been designed to provide compliant light conditions both
for play and for media coverage. There are 72 indirect, truss mounted
sports luminaires and 48 direct truss mounted sports luminaires. On
the turf, horizontal lighting level is 3,200 lux and on the vertical
(for service and shots in the air) is 1,900 lux.
- Wind - the roof can be safely deployed in wind conditions of up
to 43 mph (69 kph).
- Rainfall - the roof is designed to be weathertight. Rainfall on
the fabric roof is rapidly dispersed to the two sides as the top profile
of the roof is a curve; at the sides the water falls into gutters
and then into the main surface water drainage system.
- Internal environment - the air systems are designed to firstly control
and then stabilise the internal bowl environment at the specified
levels (24 degrees C +/- 2 degrees C, with 50% +/- 10% relative humidity
based on ambient conditions of 27 degrees C with 72% RH; if ambient
temperatures rise, the bowl temperature will be maintained provided
ambient RH levels fall), to prevent condensation on the inside of
the roof or sweating of the grass, and to provide a fresh air allowance
into bowl of eight litres/second/person.
- Seats - the new seats are padded and more comfortable. The seats
are wider and the spacing between them (centre to centre) has also
been increased.
Wimbledon Centre Court Retractable Roof images / information from
Populous, Architects
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Wimbledon Retractable Roof architect
: Populous
London Architect
London Buildings

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- adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
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