Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography, WindowsBarangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography, CityscapeBarangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Interior Photography, Table, ChairBarangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior PhotographyBarangaroo House / Collins and Turner - More Images+ 24

Barangaroo, Australia
  • Collins And Turner Team: Penny Collins, Huw Turner, David Janson, Sonny Lee
  • Developer: Monique DeCseuz
  • Principal Contractor: Jeremy Thompson, Dipankar Mukherjee, Peter Gutmann, David Springford, Phil Kiehne, Carl Nelson, Clare Hall, Eugene Labra
  • Structure: Arcadis, Martin O’Shea, Nicholas Sheldrake
  • Facade: Aurecon
  • Hydraulic: Andreas Heintze, Paul Sarza, Warren Smith & Partners
  • Fire Services: Peter Brawley, Ian Stone, Warren Smith & Partners
  • Landscape: Aspect Oculus. Sacha Coles, Jane Nalder, David Duncan, Nat Lawrence, Andrew Langford
  • Fire Consultant: Defire. Victor Tung
  • Lighting: Mark Major, Daniel Harvey
  • Specialist: ITC Eco. Enzo Botte
  • Subcontractors: Brittons Timbers
  • Project Manager: Martin Cunningham, Evan Chalmers, Rowan Stewart, Jason Tran
  • Client: Lendlease
  • Certifier: Brigitte Thearle, Stephen Natilli, Aaron Celarc, McKenzie Group
  • Studio Etic: Emily Delalande
  • City: Barangaroo
  • Country: Australia
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Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography, Cityscape

Text description provided by the architects. Positioned at the southwest extent of the Barangaroo South precinct, Barangaroo House is the outcome of design excellence competition organised by Lendlease and the Barangaroo Delivery Authority.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography
© Richard Glover

The overarching design strategy was borne of two crucial responses to site and brief: the urban response of a building ‘in-the-round’, and the holistic integration of planting; both edible and ornamental.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography
Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Image 29 of 29
Section
Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Image 23 of 29
© Felix Forest

The curved plan form creates a free-flowing space around the building, encouraging and welcoming movement, while effectively stretching the waterside terraces around the northern and southern faces of the building.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Interior Photography

A steam-bent charred timber façade gently curves in 3 dimensions, concealing a continuous ring of edible plants and generating a strong visual identity for the building, while the perimeter balconies cantilever the dining spaces outward, resulting in a uniquely outdoor atmosphere on each level.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography

From early design investigations, we sought to propose a building which spoke of the nature of the program, as well as the uniqueness of the site, while resetting the limits of how a hospitality venue can act.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography

The ambition of the project is the creation of a welcoming, timeless, convivial structure, that over time becomes a much loved part of the city.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography

Due to its ambitious brief, and bold formal outcome, Barangaroo House drove innovation and testing at every scale - from the urban response to detail resolution, and material selection.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography

The key urban design agenda of a ‘building in the round’ dictated the curvilinear form, which projects curved perimeter balconies outward in each direction. Structural cantilevers up to 8.5m permit a uniquely outdoor atmosphere to a series of dining spaces on each level of the multi-tiered building.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography

The structural cantilevers required a complex and innovative concrete waffle slab design, with several layers of post-tensioning, interwoven much like a cable-knit jumper, to allow two-dimensional spans, distributing load back to the raking structural columns, and permitting a free open floor plan for future flexibility.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Interior Photography, Table, Chair

Innovation in detailing was driven by the vision for a steam-bent charred timber facade, which would reference the primeval act of cooking, while generating a strong visual identity for the building, and aesthetically support the urban strategy of a ‘building in the round’. Prototypes were prepared to refine the concealed dowel fixings, steam bending methodology, and openable windbreaks.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Image 28 of 29
Roof Plan

Prototyping extended to material innovation as well, with the development of specialised charring equipment, testing custom-laminated glazing products., and patina metal treatments.

Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner - Exterior Photography

We think of Barangaroo House as being the result of an iterative series of examinations and prototypes, ultimately offering a highly unique response to the challenging requirements of its brief and design intent.

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Project location

Address:Barangaroo, Sydney, NSW, Australia

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "Barangaroo House / Collins and Turner" 08 Aug 2018. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/899710/barangaroo-house-collins-and-turner> ISSN 0719-8884

巴兰加鲁住宅 / Collins and Turner

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