African Design Magazine March 2015 | Page 55

i (stepping) individual bricks to articulate the building’s organic shape. The lightcoloured bricks – around 320,000 in total – were custom made for the building and reference Sydney’s sandstone heritage, while a vast glass ‘curtain wall’ reflects the building’s contemporary context. Striking stairways To encourage interaction, the building makes prominent use of stairways to move people around. The most striking of these is a polished stainless steel staircase, which lends a sculptural focal point to the main lobby and reflects the movement of both people and ideas. Manufactured by Queensland-based Urban Art Projects, it was shipped from China to Sydney in parts and assembled on site. Another eye-catching feature is a stairway made of Victorian ash, which wraps around an oval classroom on level 3, linking it to the student lounge on the floor above. Oval classrooms Two oval classrooms have been constructed from International project: Dr African project: Chau Chak Wing Building Cubana nightclub around 150 large laminated timber beams, each weighing up to two tons and the longest measuring 12 metres. Originating in New Zealand, the glue-laminated (glulam) radiata pine beams create a sculptural form within the ground-floor atrium void. The classrooms feature the world’s longest timber- concrete composite floor construction and the first in Australia. The oval form classrooms provide an intimate environment with 360° engagement, encouraging dialogue between all. Lighting Lighting is a key feature throughout the Dr Chau Chak Wing Building. Acrylic cloud-shaped lights are prominent on the lower public levels of the building, notably above the level 2 café counter and in the student lounge on level 3. On the upper levels, the cloud lighting takes on a papery texture and creates a striking point of interest in the staff kitchen on level 8 and in the Dean’s boardroom on level 12. AD africandesignmagazine.com 55