Biosciences Building, Bundoora West Campus, RMIT University

Hardo Braun, Dieter Grömling

Description

During the last years, RMIT University consistently extended its campus in Bundoora, a suburb in the northwest of Melbourne. In 2001, the new Biosciences Building was completed. The idea for the two-storey building is based on the layering and connection of landscape and research areas. The end of the linear building volume cuts into the slope with a height difference of 6 m on a length of 160 m. Hence, both floors possess its own separate entrance at ground level.

The project reflects the architect’s passion for structural interpretations of architectural concepts, which shows in every detail. He describes the building as ”a rope with spliced end” that could merge with the next module. Six modular research areas follow the entrance building. Arranged on both sides of a central corridor, they accommodate large laboratories suitable for biomedical research as well as allocated deep service and equipment zones. A single-sided administration area completes the scheme.

The corridor between these modules widens into communication areas; vertically, these areas form ”light towers” that are fully glazed, thereby relating to the exterior. These spaces for events and communication are conceived as crosspaths within the building that at the same time allow daylight to reach the central corridor.

The exterior appearance plausibly reflects the various functions within the building. The entrance hall across the administration wing features an inclined glass screen split in two parts mirroring the sky and the earth, but not the onlooker or other buildings. With its aluminium ”visor” inspired by palisade fences the administration area clearly sets itself apart from the laboratory wings and links the whole complex to the campus centre.

The fixtures and furnishings of the laboratories are strictly functional and follow an austere and elegant line. The laboratory façades consist of horizontal strips of etched concrete and glass panels – the latter material was chosen to achieve even, diffuse daylight conditions. T-shaped sunscreen elements are fixed in front. On the first floor, they consist of etched concrete; on the ground floor, black steel interspersed irregularly with red wood was used as a reference to the red wood trees that used to grow here.

Drawings

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Site plan

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Schematic sketch of building

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Ground floor

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Second floor

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Cross section through the laboratories

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Cross section through a “light tower”

Photos

The entrance is accentuated by an inclined glass screen. It mirrors the sky and the earth, but not approaching onlookers or the surrounding buildings

Communication platforms with wavy polycarbonate balustrades are suspended within the towers


Originally published in: Hardo Braun, Dieter Grömling, Research and Technology Buildings: A Design Manual, Birkhäuser, 2005.

Building Type Research & Technology Buildings

Morphological Type Clustered Low-Rise/Mat, Complex/Ensemble

Urban Context Campus, Suburbia

Architect John Wardle Architects

Year 1998-2001

Location Melbourne

Country Australia

Geometric Organization Cluster, Linear

Total Floor Area 10,600 m²

Net Floor Area 5,000 m²

Enclosed Space 47,800 m³

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Column-and-Slab

Access Type Atrium/Hall, Comb/Grid Systems

Layout Deep Linear Plan

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Program Science & Medicine

Consultants Structural engineer: Connell Mott MacDonald

Map Link to Map