Architect and Builder June/July 2019 | Page 42

Architectural Features A panoramic lift is positioned at the pinnacle of the building’s mass, transporting every inhabitant on a scenic journey to their destination. A stand-out element of the design, the exterior of the lift, is completely clad in red aluminium and sits within a glass shaft facing Table Mountain. Inside the courtyard, a highly reflective aluminium material wraps the bottom escape staircase – emulating a mirror and encouraging residents to look up. Thus, the building connects to the environment in a myriad of strategic ways and sets a precedent for urban conscious residential developments in the city. Axis challenges conventional ideas associated with an urban apartment lifestyle, 42 offering a definite uniqueness that not many other homes in Cape Town can. Challenges One of the main challenges with many residential projects is that they are quite rigid in their functional structure and are designed to facilitate the minutiae of human inhabitation. A major element of the design concept was the idea of a floating monolith. To achieve this, the architects and engineers devised a “belt beam” detail that wrapped around the entire building on the first floor. This consisted of a 500mm deep slab thickening around the edge of the building and a 1,000mm upstand that doubled up as the balcony balustrade Axis