Surrounded by a rapidly urbanizing village settlement, the 7 acre site is on the outskirts of New Delhi. The site’s existing rocky terrain posed a significant challenge to the spatial planning of the site. The project brief was to create a large warehousing facility that would be equipped with a high degree of automation. With the exception of the office block, the building would have minimal human occupancy. However, a comprehensive environmental and energy strategy became essential required to maintain habitable temperatures throughout the year.
Planned in 3
incremental phases, the 140000sqft structure is programmatically divided into 3
parts – the warehouse, the loading bay and the north-facing office block which
is interlocked with the other two. This layout enables easy stacking of future
expansion with no loss of efficiency in material/ man movement. Each block is designed
from within, the individual requirements dictating the overall dimensions. The
office is thin and narrow, facing the norththrough a glazed wall that brings in
optimum daylight. The warehouses are largely square to enable efficiency, and the
dimensions of robotic arms and stocking pallets dictate the spatial planning,
including the 20’ high ceilings. The loading bay provides the interface
between the two elements and also the exterior cargo area.
Delhi has anextreme
climate anda severely dusty micro-environment, both of which contribute to
making buildings notoriously energy-intensive in trying to cool down ambient
temperatures to human comfort levels. Traditionally, walls were made
dramatically thicker than required for structural integrity, with the intent
that the increased thermal mass would minimize heat gain. In modern times, a
single skin façade is simply not adequate to reduce the temperature and
air-conditioning is mandatory.
Rather than
overlay a conventional window-based punctured façade over the
structural frame, the warehouse and loading bay are wrapped in a perforated
brickwork screen.This screen shades a glazed dust barrier, recessed by 1200mm
from the south and north facades, creating a buffer zone that cuts glare, servesas
a utility zone and provides a high degree of passive insulation. The
glazed barrier can be opened during good weather for ventilation and during
extreme weather to allow for mechanical ventilation. The west facade is mostly blank with only
a sliver of brick screen near the ceiling to permit evening illumination and
the completely blank east façade faces the loading bay. The exposed brick
unifies the various facades and minimizes the visual impact of the building on
the surroundings.
Additionally, the
building is set nearly 4m within the ground, allowing for the parking,
mechanical and canteen spaces to be naturally illuminated while the adjacency
to the ground provides thermal insulation. The surrounding site is sloped away
from the subterranean floor, saving costly retaining walls and providing views
from within. These sunken
areas catch rainwater for harvesting which is diverted to a local well. The roofs are
covered with reflective tiling to minimize heat gain and a slim courtyard
between the office block and loading bay helps draw out hot air from within the
building.
Post occupancy
evaluation of the building shows a temperature differential of over 10degrees
between the exterior and interior spaces. As if that wasn’t good enough, the
light quality within the building is even, cool, bright, but without the glare.
Which, in a climate like Delhi, is nothing short of a miracle.
Location
Village Anangpur, Faridabad
Client
Undisclosed
Typology
Commercial
Climate
Composite
Built-Up Area
1,40,000Sq.Ft.
Completion
July 2014
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