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Design Strategies of Sharing Spaces in the Adaptive Reuse of Industrial Heritage Buildings
A Case Study of Deakin University Waterfront Campus
Under the background of post-industrial society and the information age, it is necessary and feasible to set up sharing spaces in the adaptive reuse of industrial building heritages. Australia has many industrial heritages and corresponding reuse cases that are worth learning from. Taking an university campus in Australia, which is transformed from century-old industrial heritage buildings, as an example, this paper expounds on four temporal-spatial forms of sharing spaces (Split, Layer, Time-sharing, and Differentiation). The design strategies of these forms include: (1) divide a room with sharing function in an appropriate position of a plane and connect the room with the surrounding spaces conveniently (Split); (2) demolish part of the large volume building to create an outdoor courtyard and abundant facades for walking around (Layer); (3) set back the ground floor building volumes along streets to form a public standing spaces (Time-sharing); and (4) cancel part of the floor slabs to create indoor atria connecting the roof to the ground floor, and set up a variety of functional areas in and around the atria that are open or separated by transparent interfaces (Differentiation).
Design Strategies of Sharing Spaces in the Adaptive Reuse of Industrial Heritage Buildings
A Case Study of Deakin University Waterfront Campus
Under the background of post-industrial society and the information age, it is necessary and feasible to set up sharing spaces in the adaptive reuse of industrial building heritages. Australia has many industrial heritages and corresponding reuse cases that are worth learning from. Taking an university campus in Australia, which is transformed from century-old industrial heritage buildings, as an example, this paper expounds on four temporal-spatial forms of sharing spaces (Split, Layer, Time-sharing, and Differentiation). The design strategies of these forms include: (1) divide a room with sharing function in an appropriate position of a plane and connect the room with the surrounding spaces conveniently (Split); (2) demolish part of the large volume building to create an outdoor courtyard and abundant facades for walking around (Layer); (3) set back the ground floor building volumes along streets to form a public standing spaces (Time-sharing); and (4) cancel part of the floor slabs to create indoor atria connecting the roof to the ground floor, and set up a variety of functional areas in and around the atria that are open or separated by transparent interfaces (Differentiation).
Design Strategies of Sharing Spaces in the Adaptive Reuse of Industrial Heritage Buildings
A Case Study of Deakin University Waterfront Campus
Atlantis Highlights in Engineering
Gao, Qingfei (editor) / Jiang, Liqiang (editor) / Chen, Yu (editor) / Ding, Ding (author) / Yu, Yaqing (author) / Zhang, Jia (author)
International Conference on Structural Engineering and Industrial Architecture ; 2024 ; Zhuhai, China
2024-06-07
8 pages
Article/Chapter (Book)
Electronic Resource
English
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