Woods Bagot Case Study

Words: 748
Pages: 3

Located in the midst of Etihad stadium and Southern Cross Station, the 140 metre tall and 16 level structure on 700 Bourke Street is home to the National Australia Bank, Docklands, with the workplace architecture design headed by renowned architecture firm, Woods Bagot. The building benefits from the sunken train lines, allowing phenomenal views of the west façade to be observable from the Melbourne grid in addition to creating a dynamic presence facing the city.
Following a close collaboration with NAB, Cbus Property, master plan team, the Woods Bagot architectural and interior design teams, the design approach was able to utilise data regarding information-age mobility, working environment and virtual working, enabled all of the organisations aspirations of improved business to be incorporated into the building at the start. This collaborative process was honoured with two 2014 Victorian architecture awards, winning the Commercial Architecture Award and the Interior Architecture Award. “Together we grasped the opportunity to generate a true inside/out solution beginning with the client’s business aspirations and needs – and then wrapped the architecture around it.” – Simon Pole (Project Leader).
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This is evident within the building as a triangular atrium penetrates the mass of the building as well as triangulated panel faces assembling the entire building façade. Three distinct vertical crevices which puncture building frontage, allowing each floor to receive sufficient natural sunlight in addition to being a response to the geology of the site (tension between the basalt substrate running beneath the building and the silty base of Docklands). The panels along the exteriors of the crevices are also coloured in retrospect to the amount of light they receive with a colour palette of red, orange, yellow and