Swanston Academic Building
The Swanston Academic building is an RMIT building designed by the architecture firm Lyons and is located on Swanston Street in Melbourne across from Peter Corrigan designed building 8 and ARM's Storey Hall. Construction began in September 2010 and was completed in September 2012. The budget for the SAB was $200,000,000. The new building contains of floor space, is 11 storeys high and provides 6 large lecture theatres for students.
The colourful building is intended to reflect the cities surroundings in the façade. “The idea is to wear the ‘cloak’ of the city”.
History
Before the SAB building was built, there was another proposal for a sports and recreation center that was to occupy the site. This new building would also be designed by Lyons Architects and would provide a large sports hall and allied facilities, including a gymnasium, change-rooms and health consulting suites. The hall would have had three indoor sports courts for daily use and is also intended to be a venue for elite sporting competitions, university ceremonies and student examinations. The building was to accommodate for 2600 people. The building was a tube that followed the gentle fall of the land.The building's interior was intended to be seen from the street as a public spectacle, which would reveal the university. The glass façade was to be sand blasted and seraphic printed to achieve patterning.
The building was to be a contained public space.
The current SAB by Lyons architects’ eventually replaced this design.
Features
- 6 large lecture theatres available that are available to the whole University community
- 8 Coloured Anodised Finishes by Sapphire Aluminium
- 70 small and medium-sized teaching and learning spaces that are available to the whole University community
- 9 specialist learning venues that are available to the whole University community
- Two-storey cantilevered student portal that overhangs Swanston Street
- Nine additional double-height student portals for study and recreation
- An innovative mix of teaching and office space on all levels of the building to encourage more interaction between staff and students
- Eleven retail outlets that include coffee carts, cafes and a restaurant.
Environmentally Sustainable Design
- Active chilled beam technology.
- Under Floor Air Distribution System that is used for ventilation and cooling in lecture theatres
- Student portal heating and cooling that uses mixed mode ventilation. When the external temperature is between and the wind speed is less than, the Swanston Academic Building portals will operate in natural ventilation mode, opening the vents and windows to outside conditions.
- Façade is composed of external panels and triangular elements, which provide different degrees of shading, based on the orientation of the building.
- The combination of shading elements and glazing performance allows for high levels of natural daylight to penetrate the internal spaces of the Swanston Academic Building, without allowing for significant glare.
- Rainwater harvesting and grey water treatment. To reduce the consumption of drinking water, rainwater is collected from the roof of the building in an 80 kL rainwater tank and is used for irrigation and toilet flushing.
- Energy-efficient lighting sources that include fluorescent lamps and LEDs. These lamps offer a significant reduction in lighting power consumption: approximately one third of that consumed by incandescent lamps.
- Constructed from materials that have a reduced environmental impact. These materials include those with a lower embodied energy, those that originate from sustainable sources and those that use reduced amounts of raw materials.
- Chilled water is sourced from a chilled water plant room that is located on the roof of RMIT's Building 12, opposite Building 80 on Swanston Street on the City Campus.
- The Building Management System is connected to energy and water meters and allows for real-time monitoring of water, electricity, and gas consumption
- Demand-based Control Ventilation technology, which maintains proper ventilation and improves air quality while saving energy. Carbon Dioxide Gas sensors control the amount of ventilation for the actual number of occupants.
- Solar-powered hot water capacity. The solar panels are used to pre-heat the water, which is then stored in tanks until required.
Design approach