VISION Issue 8 | Page 33

33 Is it an especially Australian design response to absorb views of the landscape into the pool area and upstairs in the gymnasium and exercise rooms rather than sealing away occupants? I’m not sure if it was any love of the outdoors so much as an opportunity to connect with the beautiful parkland surrounds. We paid particular attention to building orientation and placement of windows. The internal connections were also critical as are the borrowed views that lead to spaces beyond those. There are framed views to the park for instance and from the gymnasium a feature window to the old waterhole. Was there the experience of a project where you said ‘yes, this is the critical consideration to the understanding of what makes these facilities really tick?’ The Monash Aquatic Centre in Waverly, Melbourne (2001) helped us realize what could be achieved with such facilities. That project has such a strong shopfront presence to the main road and really explains itself to passers-by. It satisfied all of the performance and functional requirements in a very elegant way. That was something we perhaps hadn’t fully had the opportunity to fully grasp until then. That provided us with a confidence and expertise to resolve projects of this sort of complexity. It’s an age in which you can be much more emboldened with technology. Your glazing for instance would never have worked until more recently because the technology hadn’t caught up to the ideas of architects and their clients. That’s true. There’s certainly a diversity of products available that are liberating and, ironically, sometimes confusing. It’s really about matching the product to a need. Certainly the windows beyond the immediate pool have high performance glass. Many of the usual concerns about solar performance and thermal Cool Pool separation have become far more challenging, but on this project glass selection for the aquatic areas involved a counter-intuitive approach. It is unlike most buildings where code requires limiting solar heat gain. For a pool hall though you don’t need that limi t. It’s actually a benefit. You’re always trying to maintain the internal temperature at a comfortable level and that means solar heat gain is a benefit all-year-round and so we were able to seek dispensation from the normal code requirements to take a far simpler approach. That makes a huge difference with cost and design flexibility. The best sustainability solutions are presumably intrinsic rather than after-thoughts or add-ons? It’s an environment with real opportunities for energy reduction and water saving targets with recent advances in innovative sustainable aquatic design. Initiatives such as heat and electrical power from on site co-generation, efficient pre-coat pool water filtration, highly insulated and fully sealed thermal envelopes, and new air handling control systems are integrated into the new building. These initiatives combine to significantly reduce water loss and condensation, lower evaporation rates, reduce energy demand for air and water, and improve the air and water quality for what is leading practice in sustainable design for a sports and recreation facility in Australia. It’s quite restrained externally and largely reserves the wow factor for the inside. The wow factor for us was always to be most fully experienced inside. This really comes back to our emphasis around the experience rather than appearance. Of course there is the experience of the approach, but the other important one is that hour, or hour and a half, in the pool hall, gym or exercise class. You divide up the money and direct it where it has sustained and greatest impact.