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Dorobanti Tower, Bucharest, Romania, Building, Design, Development, Hotel
Bucharest Tower : Architecture Information + Images
Romanian skyscraper by Zaha Hadid Architects
Dorobanti Tower, Bucharest
2009-13
Zaha Hadid Architects
DOROBANTI TOWER [BUCHAREST, ROMANIA]
PROGRAM: 5 Star Hotel & Apartments
CLIENT: Smartown Investments
ARCHITECT: Design: Zaha Hadid with Patrik Schumacher
Project Architect: Markus Planteu
Design Team: Dennis Brezina, Naomi Fritz, Susanne Lettau, Thomas Mathoy,
Goswin Rothenthal, Rooshad Shroff, Seda Zirek
HEIGHT: 200m
Introduction
The Dorobanti Tower was designed to establish an iconic presence in
the heart of Bucharest. The new tower is a unique mix of a distinctive
form, ingenious structure, and spatial qualities of sky-high living.
The purity of its form - a chamfered diamond like structure - will
be a timeless, elegant landmark in the centre of Bucharest. Zaha Hadid
Architects design concept is a synthesis of architecture and
engineering, which integrates a distinct meandering structural mesh
frame and naturally expresses the changing programme of hotel, amenities,
and residential apartments.
The Dorobanti Tower site is located in the centre of Bucharest, to
the west of Piaza Romana, and approximately 6km south of the international
airport. The brief called for a 100,000 square metre mixed-use development
at the junction of Calea Dorobanti and St. Mihail Eminescu. The Dorobanti
Tower project comprises 34,000 square metres of a 5-star hotel (including
restaurants and a convention centre) and 35,000 square metres of luxury
apartments. Additionally, the scheme offers lower level retail areas
of 4,600 square metres and it delivers a generous allocation of public
realm. This public area will be unlike anything else in Bucharest,
representing a major attraction within the dense urban character of
the City, offering an important new meeting space and urban plaza.
Architectural Design Strategy
Urban parameters, site constraints and the building programme generate
the buildings elegant tapering profile. The unique building
geometry responds to the urban structure of the city and creates a
counterpart to the angular developments of the communist past of Bucharest.
The new Dorobanti Tower establishes a distinctive identity while avoiding
sterile repetition through its dynamically changing appearance. The
chamfered diamond shape tapers from the centre towards the top and
the bottom. On top of the Dorobanti Tower structure, the recess assures
more sunlight and views for the surrounding neighbourhoods, while
the offset at ground level creates public realm and an appropriate
entrance plaza in front of the tower.
It is required that the two listed villas adjacent to Calea Dorobanti
shall remain in place. Due to planning regulations, the site perimeter
line is offset between three and five metres. Furthermore, the client
requests the northeast corner to remain undeveloped with buildings.
All the above restrictions lead to a narrow and jagged building plot.
Programme
The 100,000m2 mixed-use Dorobanti Tower development in the centre
of Bucharest comprises underground parking, a casino, retail, restaurant,
convention centre, bar, recreation facilities, and residential apartments.
Facade / Structure
Concrete filled steel profiles follow in sinus waves from the ground
level to the top of the tower, creating a distinctive identity and
complementing the tower design. The concrete filling will give additional
strength to the structure and it will provide fire protection to the
steel profiles. The Dorobanti Tower facade structure adjusts to the
building programme and to the structural forces.
At the bottom, the façade grid has denser amplitudes according
to the structural requirements for a tower of this height, providing
the required load bearing capacity and stiffness to the structure.
At the technical and recreation levels, the structure condenses creating
almost solid knots. Additionally, the secondary structure supports
the main steel frames. It also gives the 200m tower a human scale
as the grid of the secondary frame structure reflects the floor heights.
Furthermore, the secondary structure could be utilized to support
additional glass panels as a shading device.
Landscape
The Dorobanti Tower will be recognizable for its positive approach
to public realm. The landscape is a warped concrete carpet
with one continuous surface connecting the three surrounding streets
adjacent to the tower. The deformations on the landscape create seating
areas, water basins, garden spaces including trees and a lifted terrace.
Access and Approach
Three streets surround the Dorobanti Tower plot. Due to the configuration
of the site, ZHAs proposal is to separate pedestrian and vehicular
access. In addition to
the three main streets, an additional frontage road connects St. General
Brosteanu and St. Mihai Eminescu. This road will also serve for the
residential drop-off and will create further pedestrian links between
St. G Brosteanu and St. M. Eminescu.
Pedestrian Access
The ground floor level is separated into three lobby areas, which
independently serve the hotel, apartments, and the retail area. The
main pedestrian access to the tower will be from St. Mihai Eminescu.
The Dorobanti Tower is set back from St. M. Eminescu, creating an
appropriate plaza in front of the Hotel and Casino Lobby. On the east
side, which is facing a residential area, we propose the entrance
to the apartments. Due to the shape of the building, this entrance
is protected from the traffic on St. M. Eminescu. The retail area
is accessible either via St. M Eminesu or via Calea Dorobanti.
Dorobanti Tower Bucharest images / information from Zaha Hadid
Architects 230109
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Dorobanti Tower Bucharest
architect : Zaha Hadid
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Bucharest Tower - page: adrian welch / isabelle
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