27JUL 2012
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London 2012 Basketball Arena / Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Posted in Architecture - Sports by FORMAKERS
The Basketball Arena by Wilkinson Eyre Architects is one of the biggest temporary venues ever erected for any Olympic and Paralympic Games and the third largest venue in the Olympic Park.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Located on high ground at the north end of the site, and clearly
visible from various vantage points in the Olympic Park, the Arena will provide 12,000
seats for the basketball heats and handball finals, as well as 10,000 seats for the
wheelchair basketball and wheelchair rugby competitions.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Despite a tight budget, the
Arena is set to be one of the most iconic and visually dramatic buildings of the 2012
Games.
The brief called for a structure that was simple to erect but also provided a world‐
class sporting venue for some of the most popular Olympic events.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Alongside these
factors, sustainability was a key driver in the building’s design: the arena has
been made out of robust individual components that can be easily dismantled
and subdivided for reuse, with over two‐thirds of the materials and components used on
the project identified for reuse or for recycle.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Wilkinson Eyre has used an architectural language that remains distinct from the
surrounding permanent venues, overtly celebrating both the best of British engineering
and the temporary nature of the structure through innovative and economic structural
and cladding solutions.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Lightweight,simple building components have been used instead of
a concrete structure usually found in stadia architecture, allowing the Basketball
Arena’s steel frame and cladding to be constructed in just six weeks.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
The 30m‐high rectangular volume (the equivalent of a seven‐storey building) is made
out of a steel portal frame and wrapped in 20,000 sqm of lightweight
phthalate‐free and recyclable PVC.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
This translucent bespoke cladding is stretched
across minimal steel framing modules that push the fabric out and create an elegant and
three‐dimensional undulating pattern across the facades.
The roof fabric includes an interwoven blackout layer that eliminates daylight during
game sessions and maintains fully controllable artificial lighting for the media.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
The
external walls are translucent, allowing daylight to filter through during the day and
artificial lighting to be visible in the evening.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
The variation of surface qualities used throughout the structure help animate the
building’s exterior, with the expression of the building being derived from the play
of sunlight and night‐time theatrical lighting across the fabric surface.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Wilkinson
Eyre worked with United Visual Artists, specialists in concert lighting and
installations, to create lighting and colour‐changing effects for the evening games.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
The result is a dynamic illumination which, at night, transforms the white surface into
a variety of saturated colours and strong silhouettes of the sub‐structure, creating
the biggest light installation on the Olympic park.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
Modular accommodation units that serve as the back of house areas are located outside
the Arena volume, which also shares LOCOG overlay facilities with the Velodrome and BMX
Track. These will include warm‐up courts and areas for catering, security, waste
management and the media.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
.© Wilkinson Eyre Architects
© Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects © Wilkinson Eyre Architects
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