New Zealand Commercial Design Trends Series NZ Commercial Design Trends Vol. 35/01C | Page 68

passage are intended for design-build courses and have direct access to the outdoor work area. Scattered cubes of different materials signify dif- ferent uses within the open studio space – curtains for the jury areas, glass and panels for seminar and meeting spaces, concrete for the fabrication lab. Two glazed freestanding pavilions serve as faculty and visiting professor offices that can be redesigned and rebuilt by students each year, pro- viding a setting for creativity and collaboration. And the giant multiuse studio building is just as cool in terms of sustainability as it is in terms of eye-catching, inspirational aesthetics. The design, orientation and strategic elements of the building address the movements of the sun and ensure a sustainable work environment even in the hottest months. The concrete roof warps over the southernmost point of the building to shade the interior from sunlight. The building can operate during daytime without the use of any artificial light, thanks in part to the first ever use of 5.5m-high hurricane-resistant glass panels – their superior strength an environmental requirement. Operable windows allow better circulation and eliminate dependence on air conditioning during the summer. “Studios are the heart of an architecture school – a strong magnet for prospective students,” says Fort. “Hence this building. The design of the studio spaces draws together every aspect of 21C peda- gogy into a cogent whole – packing everything into a deceptively simple envelope of thin concrete.” Dean of the University of Miami School of Architecture Rodolphe el-Khoury says the design studio complements the school’s existing constellation of buildings that constitute a campus- within-the-campus. “The vast studio space designed to enhance co-creation and the digital fabrication lab, among several other features, are welcome additions to our beloved historic and award-winning facilities.” Project:University of Miami School of Architecture Thomas P Murphy Design Studio Building Client: University of Miami, Facilities Planning & Construction Design architect and architect of record:Arquitectonica; project designer – Raymond Fort, Assoc. AIA, LEED AP Landscape architect:ArquitectonicaGEO Interior designers:ArquitectonicaINTERIORS and University of Miami Interior Design, Office of the University Architect Structural:GMG Acoustical:Shen Milsom & Wilke Mechanical, electrical and plumbing/fire protection:Stantec Civil:VSN Geotechnical engineer:NV5 Sustainability:SUMAC Construction:Coastal Construction Group search | save | share at Story by Charles Moxham Photography by Robin Hill and Miami in Focus see more online: search 324231942 at Trendsideas.com Previous pages Soaring 5.5m-high hurricane-resistant glass panels clad the sides of the structure. The building is in a sense a giant shed, with a vaulted roof held up by steel columns and a few fixed walls. Below The design studio’s open-air cafe is shaded by the building’s slender, curving roof. Facing page: A welcoming facade – with the building entry just out of picture to the left, the solid concrete end wall connects visually with another key campus building and can also be seen from the university’s transit hub.