Behind the Scenes of OMA's Latest Tower with Sustainability Consultant Arpan Bakshi

Essence Financial Building. Image © OMA

Last month, we reported on OMA's latest competition winner: the Essence Financial Building, a building that OMA Partner David Gianotten described as "a new generation of office tower" for the city of Shenzhen, China. To talk us through the building's cutting edge sustainable features, we spoke with Arpan Bakshi, an architect, engineer, and Sustainability Manager at YR&G, OMA's sustainability consultants, who led the environmental design for the project.

Learn more about the Essence Financial Building, OMA's collaborative approach, and Bakshi's views on the future of sustainable design - for both China and the world - after the break...

AD: How was the experience of working with OMA on the Essence Financial Building (EFB)?

Working with OMA is exceptionally collaborative, and there is never a napkin sketch. The design is a product of a cerebral and often exhaustive process of research and experimentation. In my first project with OMA three years ago, a multi-use development in Jilin, China, I expected to receive some formal studies following the project kick-off meeting. Instead, I was given a 59 page document with research about trends in population, culture, economic development, urbanscales, land use, and program, among other topics. No one preemptively arrived at a solution without investigating the context. I have also observed [that] the lines dividing roles between OMA and their consultants are blurred to create an open working environment towards identifying relevant design drivers across disciplines. This is an ideal working relationship.

AD: The EFB hopes to spearhead a new, contemporary office tower typology for Shenzhen - where does sustainability fit into that typology?

Unlike the contemporary office tower, which provides only a visual connection to the outdoors, occupants on every floor of the EFB have the ability to open a set of doors and walk outside ofthe building to occupy an open air space shaded by an unglazed and open structural grid. What you cannot see from the renderings is that EFB is really a building within a building. The architectural enclosure is separated into multiple planes to meet modern considerations of energy, useful daylight, comfort and biophilia without the use of additional materials often found in the application of external shading devices. This is accomplished by pulling the structural assembly outside and away from the glazing plane. The structure no longer occupies interior floor space and serves the dual purpose of protecting conditioned spaces from the Shenzhen climate.

Plans for OMA's Essence Financial Building. Image courtesy of OMA

AD: The facade of the EFB is supposedly “designed with reference to Shenzhen's climate and urban context.” Can you explain how the facade does this?

We started the project with an assessment of environmental resources. We studied both the natural and the urban environment to understand how historical climate conditions intersect with the impact of neighboring buildings. For example, there is a variation in the EFB façade module size and depth, both horizontally and vertically. This was informed by the study of the interactive relationship between the movement of the sun, the city layout, outdoor temperatures and indoor activity which determine the experience inside the building. Balancing these considerations affects the size of mechanical equipment and the energy it consumes.

AD: One of the defining qualities of the EFB is its core, which is shifted to the edge of the floor plate, and its unique volumes; what are the environmental implications of these structural shifts?

The shifted core supports occupant health and wellness through active design, a growing focus in sustainability. The removal of a central core encourages mobility across the floor plate and between floors through voids cut into the massing to form a series of open atria.

The core of OMA's Essence Financial Building. Image courtesy of OMA

AD: In what ways are you attempting to “adapt the design process to be informed by data and analysis in the earliest pre-design and proposal phase studies”?

We use design technology and analytical methods to understand the leverage points of a project, its personality. In pre-design, this is done using little information such as site location and climate, program requirements and common typological assumptions. By integrating analysis into the design process, we can develop a range of physical and material parameters to inform massing and spatial studies. Having that knowledge from the beginning reduces uncertainties and construction costs.

AD: Can you elaborate on what “points of conflict [led] to opportunities for innovation” during the design of the EFB?

Innovation is creating an elegant solution to meet competing and often contradictory forces in design. If you are looking directly at the sun, are you enjoying the view? If shades are drawn, is daylighting effective? If you are feeling cold from supply air and hot from window solar at the same time, are you comfortable? These are the types of considerations which gave shape to the way the boundaries of conditioned spaces were articulated in EFB.

Plans for OMA's Essence Financial Building. Image courtesy of OMA

AD: Considering the speed in which the world, and particularly China, is developing, do you find it difficult to achieve your environmental agenda, when often familiar, unsustainable practices are quicker/easier to implement?

Sustainability is the only way China can continue to grow. It provides a framework for using resources effectively. As we have seen throughout history, there comes a time when it costs more to ignore an environmental situation than it does to address it. During our own industrial revolution, the strain on livability reached a point of saturation. This is when the clean-up started to happen, as it will in China and other rapidly industrializing nations.

AD: How important is sustainable design today for Chinese developers?

Businesses in China equate a sustainable building with a quality building. Project proposals clearly state goals like ‘ecologically-friendly’, ‘comfortable’ and ‘efficient’. This indicates a demand on developers for sustainable design from their tenants.

Rendering for OMA's Essence Financial Building. Image courtesy of OMA
Rendering for OMA's Essence Financial Building. Image courtesy of OMA

AD: What does sustainable design mean today? How can design tackle the many issues facing the world today?

Sustainable design today means working at the intersection of people and technology. For instance, technology helps us analyze complex design scenarios and operate building systems with precision. But technology only responds to inputs from the people who operate it. Understanding and informing human behavior, and coupling that with technological innovation can bring about massive change upstream.

AD: What concerns do you think will become more important in the future? Is architecture, as it exists now, equipped to respond to these challenges?

Today’s architecture is shaped primarily by the physical growth of urban areas as a result of rural migration. Urbanization will continue to be both a challenge and an opportunity. Buildings in the future will not only be efficient, they will be versatile. Professionals are equipped with the necessary design tools, but architecture doesn’t exist in a vacuum; finance and politics add complexity to implementing new ideas. Sustainability will inevitably have to shift from prevention to adaptability, as meteorological events become increasingly volatile.

Models for OMA's Essence Financial Building. Image courtesy of OMA
About this author
Cite: Vanessa Quirk. "Behind the Scenes of OMA's Latest Tower with Sustainability Consultant Arpan Bakshi" 06 Mar 2013. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/339487/behind-the-scenes-of-omas-latest-tower-with-sustainability-consultant-arpan-bakshi> ISSN 0719-8884

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