Panta Rhei Research Centre for Lightweight Materials

Hardo Braun, Dieter Grömling

Description

Four professorial chairs of the Faculty for Mechanical Engineering and Electronics of Cottbus University do research in the field of lightweight materials for innovative application in the automotive and aviation industry. Since the university wants to combine academic teaching with hands-on practice and work experience, students of architecture and their teachers established a non-profit planning company to work on refurbishment projects and extensions on campus. The research centre is their first completed project.

The brief called for a building offering spaces for research and development propelled by communication and teamwork; it was also to reflect the innovative research concept with cutting-edge architecture. The priority objective of the participating chairs is to establish synergies between university and companies of the industry to bridge the gap between theory and practice.

Panta Rhei is classical Greek and can be translated with ”all things are in constant flux”. The term stands for the high flexibility and variability the project is to provide for future developments. The most suitable form to achieve this goal is a single large space with an open plan arrangement.

The design idea is simple: A long building volume is placed into a hall covered by a curved roof. These elements form a clear and compact large structure. The mono-curved roof clad with perforated sheet metal covers all laboratory and study rooms on an area of 72 x 38 m. Following a ”house-in-house” scheme, an elongated three-storey structure is arranged on one long side of the hall. On the ground floor, it houses the laboratories, and mixed-use offices and meeting rooms on the two upper floors. Highly flexible areas for experiments are located in the hall and visually linked to all rooms within the building.

Curved steel girders constitute the form of the hall building. Its gable ends are fully glazed. On its south side, the cantilevering seminar room marks the entrance which is oriented towards the axis of the campus walk. The lightweight building envelope encourages onlookers to have associations with the research field of the building: the development of applications for magnesium (besides aluminium) in order to reduce weight and thus energy consumption.

Drawings

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Schematic sketch of building

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Ground floor

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First and second floor

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Cross section

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Longitudinal section through hall with elevation of integrated office volume

Photos

The distinctive cantilevering seminar room – a red box – accentuates the entrance which is oriented towards the main campus walk

Experiments and theoretical work are carried out next to each other: the hall houses machinery, the long structure accommodates offices and laboratories


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

Building Type Research & Technology Buildings

Morphological Type Solitary Building

Urban Context Campus, Modernist Urban Fabric

Architect Alexander Koblitz, Kleyer.koblitz.architekten, Timm Kleyer

Year 2001-2002

Location Cottbus

Country Germany

Geometric Organization Linear

Net Floor Area 4,000 m²

Enclosed Space 41,000 m³

Height Low-Rise (up to 3 levels)

Load-Bearing Structure Column-and-Slab, Wide-Span Structures

Access Type Atrium/Hall

Layout Linear Plan

New Building, Refurbishment or Extension New Building

Consultants Laboratory planning: Freischladt + Assmann, Haiger
Mechanical services, HVAC, engineering: Siegert und Krah
Electrical engineer: Wernicke

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