Carr-Bruce Street Commercial Building
Catalyst for rejuvenation - Set within Kensington’s historic industrial precinct, the eight storey commercial building designed by Carr at 18-20 Bruce Street is the first project to pass Melbourne City Council’s Green Factor Tool and is set to revive an area ready for life again.
Site - Nestled between North Melbourne and Flemington, Bruce Street is uniquely placed to rejuvenate Kensington’s historical industrial wedge. Defined by its streets of red brick warehouses, towering grain silos, and the Younghusband wool store dating back to 1901, the new eight storey commercial building designed by Carr is the first development of scale in the precinct. Delivering both the architectural and interior design elements, the design pays tribute to the project’s historical site with its robust form made up of concrete slabs spliced with red brick piers, balanced with fine metal balustrades.
Architecture - Composed predominantly of concrete, recycled bricks and glazed elements, the podium is made up of four levels and faces directly onto Bruce Street, while the four levels above the podium are set back four meters to break up the form and massing. The architecture responds to the vernacular of the existing fabric of Kensington and nearby warehouse buildings.
The form is expressed as a series of slab edges that create a dialogue with the horizontal banding of the neighboring warehouse buildings. Inserted skewed brick piers are positioned between the main façade and the boundary line, framing views to the northeast and toward the city to the southeast. The piers are positioned and utilized to provide passive solar protection from the western sun, while the hit-and miss brickwork allows additional filtered natural light and a layer of articulation and craftmanship to the façade, while deep balconies protect glazing and offer ample outdoor amenities for tenants to enjoy. Passive design elements like these mean that the architecture and the design are inherently sustainable from conception rather than an afterthought.
The entire façade is punctured and softened by the extensive landscaping allowed for in the double and triple-height voids. Each floor has been designed to offer sightlines to green, be it via the trees dotted up the façade or the large concrete planters across the balconies. At ground level, a large canopy tree is centrally planted and rises through the slab punctuation, becoming one with the building. Designed by Sydney Design Collective and Junglefy, the landscaping extends to include a 400-metre squared extensive bio diversity green roof. Used for research by the University of Melbourne and RMIT, the roof will create an important ecosystem and offer the local wildlife from the river refuge during migration seasons. As a gas-neutral building and passive in its approach to sun shading, along with an array of other green initiatives, the project is a direct response to the current climate and biodiversity emergency.
from archdaily
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