Share Architecture
 
 
334Comments
305Articles
910Days Operating
223442Hit Counter
advertise here


articles
share survey
Help us out! What area of design are you in?
Studying
Practicing Grad/Architect
Interior Design
Graphic Design
3D Visualisation
Teaching
Urban Design
Other
View Results
publications
Herriot+Melhuish – Architecture + - Studio Pacific Architecture
...
El Croquis 140: Álvaro Siza 2001- 2008
...
Share Comments
Article:Urban Camping by import.export
Caravanning is a very popular vacation choice for many. Allowing holidaymakers the freedom of the road, whilst also prov ..
Post By Rumana Akter
Article:Jagged Edge, Queenstown, NZ
Awsome as that house is an engineers dream, Im studying to be a structual engineer my self. Well done hope the building ..
Post By jacob
Article:Jagged Edge, Queenstown, NZ
This is an awesome building, was amazing even in the construction stage. Hope to see it when it is finished. The wine c ..
Post By The Stigs New Zealand Cousin
Article:Storm Sewer System. Saitama, Japan
It's quite an engineering feat. Japanese has the will and economic power to do long term infrastructures for their socie ..
Post By QK Sand
Article:PUGH + SCARPA's DUPLEX IN THE LOWER 9TH WARD
http://www.yout-ube.com/user/la-rryscarpa#p/a/u-/0/miVZ50_Ih40 - On Thursday June 10th, 2010 Pugh + Scarpa received th ..
Post By Daniel
Article:Schmitz House. Santiago Chile. Assadi + Pulido
Hello, my name is Ivana and l'm coming to Santiago on 22nd of July as an exchange student and l need a place to stay dur ..
Post By Ivana Malarić
Article:Iron Bank, Auckland, RTA Studio
I jolly love this building. Obviously it's bold, but I would go as far as extreme, and so, stimulating which sadly is re ..
Post By Kim D.
Article:Elliot Tower, Moller Architects, Auckland, Tell us your thoughts
Too much negativity in this country, no applauding innovation. Compare Auckland CBD with Brisbane's CBD which is a nice ..
Post By Dave
Article:Elliot Tower, Moller Architects, Auckland, Tell us your thoughts
Good news - this monstrosity of a tower is dead and buried. Thank god for that! Now let's hope something decent rises on ..
Post By Hamish
Article:41-storey skyscraper in Auckland. Tell us your thoughts
I'm not from New Zealand but currently living in New Zealand for almost 2 years. What I picked up from a few New Zealand ..
Post By Jean
Article:SOS Queens Wharf Petition.
The people of new zealand want these horrid blight-on-the-c-ity, eye sore, rotting, waste of space sheds to go and never ..
Post By Jacob
Article:SOS Queens Wharf Petition.
Whilst I initially dismissed the value of these sheds - having had a good look inside and at the photos of the "no go" a ..
Post By Simon
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.

 Post To Fackbook  Email To Friend  Add Comment
Read 40 Comments
by Ellen Monday 21 April, 2008
Looking at the skyline shot- The building looks stupidly big and out of proportion with everything else around it
by Armstrong Monday 14 April, 2008
Akash, the apartments in the main article image look a little reminescent of a chicken coop now you mention it. I find it hard to comment meaningfully though on the quality of the apartments without seeing the plans. Do you not agree the solar panels read as very much a \'tacked\' on afterthought? i-n my humble opinion, yes it is a step in the right direction, but a very \'safe and simple\' one at that, it is hardly an exercise in leading edge environmentally sustainable design nor it is an exercise in thinking outside the square, which we as architects charged with improving our built environ should be striving for.
by Akash R. Monday 14 April, 2008
Armstrong, I defintely think that the Elliott tower will be a breath of fresh air for Auckland CBD. If you havent noticed already there's a current gap of high quality apartments in the city, and the Elliott will fill that gap. For the past couple of years, we have seen unattractive, ugly, 'chicken coop' apartments go up in the city. Look at this photo for instance: http://upload.w-ikimedia.org/wi-kipedia/commons-/7/74/Auckland_-CBD_Residential-_Highrise.jpg - The apartment building is ghastly and would rather fit into the urban scene of Moscow, not Auckland. The Elliott tower development is of quality-atleast-! Oh! And I would actually commend the developer for including solar panels in the design of the building...it is something thats never been done before and will set an example for further future devlopments. I believe that the design is imaginative, if not "iconic" as many people would want it to be. Not every building that goes up in the city needs to have a design competition launched for it.
by Armstrong Sunday 13 April, 2008
In response to Akash.R's comment, by a "breath of fresh air" do you mean its refreshing to see another relatively un-imaginative, conservatively designed building make its mark on Aucklands skyline? In my opinion, there is nothing remotely innovative about 'tacking a solar array' to the roof of the building, in order to 'tick' that green box. It reads very much as an after thought and is a missed opportunity to integrate this technology directly into the fabric of the building. As for the apartments been at the "upper end of the market"? thats great! more un-affordable property aimed at the affluent and elite. I would suggest checking out the following article as an example of how it spossible to think outside the square occasionally. - http://www.sh-arearchitecture-.co.nz/evolo-sk-yescraper -com-petition-p-79.h-tml
by Akash R. Thursday 10 April, 2008
Elliott Tower is going to be amazing for Auckland-a breath of fresh air. The design is very innovative and will complement the Sky Tower-not overtake its so called "iconic status"...The Sky tower has no rights whatsoever to block air space within the city... This is a quality development for Auckland and the apartments will be at the upper eend of the market. The Elliott Tower will enhance the skyline of Auckland even more and we will finally have something taller than 200 m for a change!
by Luke Thursday 27 March, 2008
The Sky Tower is neither original nor innovative. The fact that it's become an icon of Auckland is a measure of the generally mediocre architecture around the city. As has been said, simply because it is currently the tallest structure doesn't give it rights to dominate indefinitely over the city's skyline. The future will see the skyline growing taller overall anyway, and talk of the building being too tall seems somewhat dated and anachronistic. Just because Auckland has seen a glut of cheap, awfully designed apartment buildings in the past doesn't mean they all need to be like this, and Elliot Towers certainly seems considered: slim, tapering, with solar and wind generating capabilities and two full floors of public green space.
Displaying 31 to 36 (of 40 comments) Result Page: [<< Prev]  ... 6  7  [Next >>] 
Comment about Elliot Tower, Moller Architects, Auckland, Tell us your thoughts
Please complete all fields
Your Name:
Your Email: (for verification purposes only)
Please enter the following validation code in the space below
Your Comment: