UTS delivers a business school for future captains of industry

UTS delivers a business school for future captains of industry

Feb 2, 2015  Architecture 


UTS delivers a business school for future captains of industry
(Photo by: Andrew Worssam)

The Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia, Sir Peter Cosgrove, today opened Sydney's newest architectural landmark – the Dr Chau Chak Wing Building at the University of Technology Sydney.

Pritzker Prize winning architect Frank Gehry flew to Australia for the opening of his first Australian project. Named in honour of Australian-Chinese businessman and philanthropist Dr Chau Chak Wing, the new building is home to the UTS Business School.

UTS Vice-Chancellor Professor Attila Brungs said the new Dr Chau Chak Wing Building is a physical manifestation of the innovative thinking that underpins the teaching, learning and research undertaken by the Business School and UTS as a whole.

"Frank Gehry has created unique spaces to inspire a life-long love of learning, enable completely new educational experiences and enrich UTS's approach to research," Professor Brungs said. "It is a building designed to encourage the sharing of ideas among students and staff alongside our industry and community partners."

The Dr Chau Chak Wing Building is another milestone of UTS's $1.2 billion City Campus Master Plan which is enabling the university to deliver a bold vision of high-level student collaboration in learning and teaching that fosters student engagement through innovative use of technologies.

Gehry's masterpiece, along with a new engineering and IT building that opened last year on Broadway, will be joined by a new graduate health and science building in March this year.

"The Dr Chau Chak Wing Building is certainly a masterpiece of design and engineering. It is indeed a work of art. But it is much more than that," UTS Chancellor Professor Vicki Sara said.

"This building is a symbol of everything UTS stands for – it epitomises our vision to be a world-leading university of technology where creativity and innovation intersect."

Inspired by the idea of a tree house, Gehry describes his building design as "a growing learning organism with many branches of thought, some robust and some ephemeral and delicate".

"The successful completion of this architectural marvel is the result of years of dedicated work and collaboration from all parties involved in this project, particularly our staff," Professor Brungs said.

"It has been an honour and privilege to work with Frank Gehry and Dr Chau Chak Wing who generously donated $20 million toward completion of this Australian first. His additional gift of $5 million for scholarships is already making it possible for Australian and Chinese students to study here and in China."

The Dr Chau Chak Wing Building is designed from the inside out, starting with the collaborative learning and work spaces. It features a unique east-facing sandstone coloured, undulating brick façade that responds to Sydney's sandstone heritage, while the large glass panels which comprise the west facing façade reference the building's city surrounds.

Dr Chau Chak Wing said he was delighted Frank Gehry had accepted the UTS commission. "His design is distinctive, full of passion," he said. "There is nothing like it in Australia. He is an unparalleled architect."

UTS worked collaboratively with Gehry Partners (the design architect) and Daryl Jackson Robin Dyke (executive architect) and contractor Lend Lease to bring this vision into existence on time and on budget.

UTS Dean of Business Professor Roy Green said the new building would foster excellence in postgraduate business education and research, and become a compelling venue for executive education, business events and forums.

"We are located at the heart of Sydney's growing 'digital creative hub' and in a hot spot of new business incubation and innovation," Professor Green said.

"Already connected with Sydney's beating business heart we can now further collaborate with cultural, media, commercial, government and educational organisations, fostering and learning from exciting new start-up enterprises."

Bound by Ultimo Road, Mary Ann Street and Omnibus Lane, the building will be a key destination on the redeveloped Goods Line that extends from Darling Harbour to Central Station. Teaching will begin in the new UTS Business School at the beginning of semester one on 23 February.

Turning heads outside, glowing on the inside

AECOM designed the building services for the project, including developing the lighting design based on a concept by L’Observatoire International to have the building glow from the inside.

AECOM worked with UTS to embed several environmentally sustainable design (ESD) features within the building, and that have resulted in the achievement of a Green Star Education 5 Star Design Rating.

One of the challenges AECOM faced in partnership with UTS was how to heat and cool the building sustainably. The interior consists of various different zones – lecture theatres, offices and meeting rooms – all requiring different methods of temperature control.

The solution? Provide dedicated air conditioning units for each zone, and sensor technology to minimise wastage when a zone is unoccupied. The building also uses a higher than normal volumes of outdoor air to cool fan coil units.

This fresh-air feature, combined with shorter air conditioning ducts means fans don’t need to work as hard, and air-cooled chillers mean the building does not consume much water in the process. In fact, water usage is kept to a minimum across the building, with a fire water reclamation system and water-efficient appliances fitted throughout.

Public can participate in tours of the building during an open weekend on Saturday 7 and Sunday 8 February 2015. Tour times will be between 9am and 4pm. Registration for tours will be available from midday 2 February via the UTS web page.




Via University of Technology, Sydney
Image,video ©: Andrew Worssam, Gehry Partners LLP, University of Technology, Sydney/The Timelapse Company