Wednesday, July 05, 2006

Emma Giacon of Pan attended a meeting today about further developments at King's Cross. Here's her report:

"Peter Millican from the King's Place development and Richard Thompson from architects Dixon Jones popped in at lunchtime to give us all a bit more info on what's going on in the building site next door. After last week's events, first on most people's minds was 'Can we expect to be evacuating our offices again any time soon?'  The answer, happily, was no, with Peter apologising profusely for the inconvenience.  Apparently it was a very small fire, and didn't slow down the building work too much... lucky them!

Development on the site is coming on apace, and we were told that the building will begin to take shape properly around Christmas.  By all accounts it will be an impressive space:  two concert halls (the larger of which will seat 425 people), sculptures (that will be visible from York Way as well as throughout the building), and a floor devoted to visual arts (that will house a permanent collection of portraits) will all be open to the public.  A colonnade along the York Way side of the development will provide some glamour to a currently unappealing road, while an internal street will lead visitors from York Way right through the building to the canal.
I should mention that this will be a very ‘green’ building, producing only half the CO2 per square metre that most offices produce.

The York Way side of the building will also benefit from a glass façade - which as well as looking very striking - will also provide a noise barrier for the building within.  Dixon Jones (who have worked on notable projects including The Royal Opera House, National Gallery and National Portrait Gallery) have also included a rotunda building that will sit on the corner of the canal basin.  The ground floor of the rotunda will house a huge brasserie restaurant with inside and outside dining, and there will also be a private events section canalside.

We will certainly be gaining illustrious neighbours renting the offices on site.  As well as 1500 staff from The Guardian, the Sinfonietta Orchestra and The Orchestra of the Age of Enlightenment will be in residence, and New Music groups such as NMC, SPNM and BMIC will likely be based there.  We also hear that Central St Martin's Art College is moving to Kings Cross, so our bright new authors from Pan will be joined by bright young artists - very appropriate!

The thing to remember about all this is that as well as this particular development, the area in general will be completely overhauled by Argent (beginning late 2007 when the Channel Tunnel link is completed).  It really feels as though we are witnessing of something very exciting and refreshing, of which all locals, residents and business, will be able to take advantage."

7/5/2006 4:52:44 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
It is a grand vision, indeed. Listening to Peter and Richard talk was an interesting experience because they clearly look into the future - give it five years, and Kings Cross will be as they see it now.
7/5/2006 5:17:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Glass a noise barrier? Like hell. Glass vibrates with sound, and can conduct it very well. What you want is a rough surfaced masonry, or a sound diffusing material. Something that will either absorb or diffuse the sound. But that aint as neato-keen as glass, so what can you do?

Even worse is the glare. Sunlight reflected off the glass into people's eyes, causing visual damage and accidents.

And let us not forget the birds.

To deal with problems like that you really need to pebble or popcorn the outside surface. That is, texture the surface much as the surface is textured in popcorn ceilings.

An ordinary glass front has so many problems it's not even funny.

On the other hand, there is the transparent colored glass option. The type of glass you're speaking of is made to be reflective, bouncing back most of the light. The upcoming San Diego Central Library (forever upcoming) is to have light green non-reflective glass. Passers-by will be able to see within, and library patrons will be able to look out. For privacy (and sound absorption) you use drapes.

This also has an advantage with birds. Birds think that what gets reflected back at them is open sky they can fly through. With transparent glass the animals can see inside, and thus can see that what waits ahead of them is not sky, and so should be avoided.

Last, and certainly not least, reflective glass is so cliche.
7/5/2006 9:41:45 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
wonder where all the drug dealers and prostitutes are going to go now ? Waterloo I guess.
7/10/2006 6:36:03 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
Not sure who Alan Kellogg is but in response to his comments:

1. It is not just the glass which forms the sound barrier but the triple glass wall with a wide air cavity.

2. The cavity and the solar shading in the cavity also creates a solar barrier which is environmentally sound design. The wall cuts solar gain from 640watts/m2 to 100watts/m2.

3. All glass is reflective at certain angles but our glass is absolutely not reflective glass in the sense implied, so the birds will see in and hopefully it will not look cliché!

Hope that answers Alan’s points.