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Elliot Tower, Moller Architects, Auckland, Tell us your thoughts
11
Mar 2008

Moller architects await ruling on Auckland's Elliott Tower
Moller, designer of the Auckland Sky and Macau (China) Towers is currently awaiting a Resource Consent ruling for go ahead for the 67 storey Elliott Tower, a residential development sitting atop a three level double height spaced retail centre podium based around a centralised atrium. The top of the podium has a substantial roof garden, where not occupied by the tower.

The slim tower is designed to accommodate 260 apartments with the vertical height split by two Sky Gardens with large trees oxygenating the intake air to the mechanical plant and contributing to sustainable design principles which are further enhanced by the rooftop solar collectors and co-generation of heat from mechanical plants.

The 67 storey Elliott Tower consists of a gently curving East façade, forming a shimmering façade and backdrop to the Elliott Street retail podium, with the other three faces of the tower designed as orthogonal faces, separated into slimmer elements to accentuate the essence of a multi storey building.

The long west façade is further articulated with bay windows which give spectacular views from the building and provide a vigorous rhythm to this elevation.

The tower is placed on pilotis at the podium which repeat at the sky gardens, in an expression of the structural concept.

The top of the tower has two penthouses with decks, balconies and pergolas, and above are three layered roof forms - both to defer to Sky Tower in urban form terms and to provide 180 solar collectors which will provide hot water to the entire complex for 65% of the year.

The tower top has been carefully considered such that it provides a positive cap to the building, but is light and open, encapsulating a spatial lightness.

The stair to the east façade extends above the top of the building, which, along with the curved and extended glass façade, dissolves into the sky. This characteristic is further enhanced by the curved façade extending beyond the north and south ends of the tower.

In placing the tower close to the Albert Street frontage and in north/south orientation, the impact on the views towards the harbour from buildings to the south would be minimised, and the apartments within Elliott Tower would enjoy both morning and afternoon sun.

The podium consists of three double height levels of retail grouped around a central atrium and entry/exit points are located at the Elliott/Victoria and Victoria/Albert street corners, existing footpaths and via through site links between Elliott Street and Albert Street. Parking for 481 cars is accommodated in a six level basement with access from and to lower Albert Street.

The tower consists of 62 levels above the podium and has been designed to "address" Albert Street through being close to this boundary and the apartments are designed as cross over duplexes so that each has morning and afternoon sun and views. Common space for residents is provided by the podium roof garden, and two sky gardens located at third points on the tower. These also provide green spaces up the tower, and with large trees oxygenating the intake air to the mechanical plant and contributing to sustainable design principles which are further enhanced by the rooftop solar collectors and co-generation of heat from mechanical plants.

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Read 40 Comments
by bluff Thursday 24 July, 2008
There was no court ruling at all...Dae Ju, Sky City and Phillips Fox managed to resolve their 'issues'...an-d YES! this can finally go ahead :)
by M Juma Wednesday 23 July, 2008
The court ruling came through and Elliot can proceed ahead. yay!
by AR Thursday 01 May, 2008
Absolutely! Sky City fails to realise that a city needs to grow! The Sky Tower cant keep holding air space forever in this city and dominate all the other buildings..."I-conic" it may be, but it's just a poor excuse to stop any other building from being taller than what it is. Sky City should learn from cities like Sydney, which have 'iconic' towers surrounded by buildings just as tall. They rather complement the tower than dominate it and ruin its status... Afte-rall, the Sky tower is a casino! lol And I wonder if the 'iconic status' of the many historic clocktowers and church towers in the city was ruined when the Sky Tower was originally built! DLA Phillips Fox has also objected the Elliott! Tall Poppy syndrome anyone?
by Organism Thursday 01 May, 2008
It is really a great looking tower albeit on the "safe" side. However, what a shame that it is being held up by the selfish interests of Sky City who seem to think that they own the rights to the sky. I can only hope that the powers that be teach Sky City a lesson in humility and I also hope that they learn to understand the concept and dynamics of a growing city.
by M-D Wednesday 30 April, 2008
Another one of those projects that nods its head toward current buzz-words perhaps more for marketing than for any real sense of social or environmental benefit. The solar energy generation is a case in point. Its sexy, and will no doubt save money, but the reality in terms of energy production is a different story. It should be noted that the relative inefficiency of photo-voltaics means that to pay back the embodied energy of their manufacture can take up to 6-7 years if the cells were operating at maximum power points which would certainly not be the case in this instance, as there is no power tracking. Given the 20 year warrantee period on such equipment, the energy savings of this sustainable source are significantly smaller than is generally believed to be the case. And if sustainable energy is an aim, why the heck design a glass-curtain walled building in the first place??? The air-con required to maintain a habitable environment in this building will far exceed the energy saved by the solar collectors. This is a real issue that, if properly addressed, could drastically reduce the environmental footprint of urban architecture which lets face it, are never ever going to be sustainable in the true sense of the word anyway. The sky-gardens are perhaps even sexier than the photo-voltaics, and certainly add a nice touch to the otherwise banal curtain wall. However, I wonder how viable these are, given the wind speeds that are likely to be barrelling through there (due to the fact that windspeeds are significantly faster at the higher you get, and that the placement of small gaps in large blank walls is likely to create a wind-tunnel style acceleration). What sort of plants will withstand these conditions (I suspect not the leafy trees that are indicated probably hardy spiky things with less oxygenating ability), and how often will those evocatively drawn scribble-figure-s venture out into this space? (To be fair, it isnt located in Wellington though). An-d I wont even go into the idea of sustainable neighbourhoods as there is no indication of how the building even attempts to create or add to a liveable community in that respect it is largely more of the same. Which is how I would describe the building (based on this article at least) more of the same just with a few sexy bits tacked on to help sell it to a discerning market
by AR Sunday 27 April, 2008
The building is surely taller than all the others around it. This is a good thing because it will encourage future developments to be taller. In the next 5 years or so, I think Auckland will have many more buildings around its height :)
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