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UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

Luxembourg Architecture News - Feb 27, 2024 - 11:14   1155 views

UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

UNStudio has unveiled design for a new office with a mixed-use plinth in Luxembourg, which will reduce carbon footprint around 80%. 

UNStudio together with local partner HYP Architects, have recently won a competition for the design of the Kyklos building in Belval, announced by a real estate development company Atenor, Arhs group and Agora Luxembourg.

Called Kyklos Building, the 7,600-square-metre building will be built in Belval - a redevelopment project that has successfully transformed an old industrial site in Luxembourg into an urban centre that now houses a university and technological centre, residential and office spaces, in addition to hotels and retail. 

The Kyklos building will be the last building to shape the Central Square district.

UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

The studio has deviced a tool, called The Carbon Builder, to calculate the lowest carbon footprint in the design stage, which has been used for the first time in the conceptual stage of the Kyklos building.

"From the outset, the design team were determined to propose a building with the smallest possible carbon footprint," said UNStudio.

"For the Kyklos building proposal, using the early prototype of the Carbon Builder enabled the team to make the correct decisions early in the concept design process."

"By assessing the embodied carbon, it was possible to reduce the carbon footprint of the design concept for this building by around 80% compared to a traditional office building in Luxembourg," the studio explained.

"As we now have the knowledge and capability to design operational net zero buildings, in order to align our practice with the Paris agreement and European taxonomy, UNStudio is currently focusing on the development of better design for low embedded carbon buildings," the firm continued.

"While in recent years the focus when designing new builds has been firmly placed on operational carbon emissions, in fact in the first approximately 40 years, only 10% of a building's carbon footprint is determined by its operational use."

"90% is determined by the materials used. So whilst operational carbon remains an essential concern, for the design of the Kyklos building, great effort was made to consider the entire (whole life) carbon footprint," the studio added.

UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

"A fully-fledged sustainable design framework"

UNStudio is currently in the process of developing a fully-fledged sustainable design framework that, alongside other applications, enables their designers to have full control of the embodied carbon impact of the designs. 

As part of this set of tools, the team has devised the "Carbon Builder" that makes it possible for designers to intricately study numerous options to reduce the carbon footprint of their projects.

The tool enables the team to make the correct decisions early in the concept design process, accoridng to UNStudio. "By assessing the embodied carbon, it was possible to reduce the carbon footprint of the design concept for this building by around 80% compared to a traditional office building in Luxembourg."

UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

Material choice plays a key role

As the studio emphasized, the choice of materials plays an important role in designing buildings. It stated that "the possibility of using steel with 100% recycled content and working with best practice concrete mixtures, improved the carbon performance of the project significantly." 

Set against the function-use demands, the studio observed that the choice of a hybrid steel-concrete structure was more beneficial compared to other construction methods. 

According to the firm, "this hybrid solution offered a better carbon performance in the long run." 

"The early best possible roadmap shows the ultimate possibility of achieving 115kg of CO2 equivalent/m2, compared to 580 kg/m2 for a typical office building in Luxembourg."

"The Kyklos building is anticipated to achieve BREEAM Outstanding and WELL Platinum certifications," the team continued.

UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

"Timber is not always the best option"

"Our new carbon tools have shown us that timber is not always the best option and that highly sustainable buildings do not all have to look the same," said Ben van Berkel, co-founder of UNStudio. 

"We can now demonstrate that interesting geometry and high levels of sustainability are not mutually exclusive," Van Berkel added.

The building is intended to be the centerpiece of the Agora Masterplan and is strategically located in the centre of the development, next to "Place des Bassins".

The emblematic design of the Place des Bassins connects two basins - remnants of the former steelworks site on which the district is developed - in the form of a singular ‘infinity loop’. 

This loop symbolises the alliance of the industrial site and its revitalisation as an urban space. Due to its proximity to the square, the building is envisioned as the third loop in this equation: a sustainable connection that represents the future of the urban development.

Urban integration and a holistic sustainable approach are the two main drivers of the design of all elements of the building, from its functional organisation to its construction techniques and its materiality.

From the beginning of the design process, the goal was to highlight the unique elements of the site and create a building whose form could clearly and uniquely be linked to these features. 

The design takes into account the master plan, the main pedestrian path and the existing main square, to create a building that is inspired by and complements its surroundings. The result is the combination of the circular geometry of the square with the orthogonal geometry of the surrounding buildings.

UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

While the total surface area covers a 7,600-square-metre above ground and with a basement of 2,250-square-metre area, the Kyklos building offers 8 floors of office space above a mixed-use lower level. 

Numerous strategies are incorporated into the design to ensure high levels of transparency and daylight. One corner of the building is setback on the lower levels, creating an overhang that further serves to protect from overheating.

The lobby is designed as a unified space comprising both the main reception and commercial functions that are directly accessible from inside and outside. 

From here a large, circular staircase forms a visual connection with the Place des Bassins outside, while encouraging users of the building to use the stairs, rather than the elevators.

UNStudio unveils Kyklos building in Luxembourg, reducing carbon footprint around 80%

The floor plates of the Kyklos building branch from the circular core and are suspended from steel cables. 

This eliminates the need for load bearing columns as much as possible and frees up the floors for a variety of possible interior layouts. The design of the building also ensures flexibility for possible use changes in the future.

UNStudio created a monumental façade with petal-like columns for Huawei flagship store in Shanghai, China. The firm unveiled design for a new mixed-use complex in the Hangzhou Olympic Sports Centre Area in Hangzhou, China.

Project facts

Project name: Kyklos Building

Architects: UNStudio

Location: Belval, Luxembourg

Local Architect: HYP Architects

Building surface: 7,600m2 GFA, 3600m2 below ground            

Building site: 1200m2

UNStudio: Ben van Berkel, Arjan Dingste with Stella Nikolakaki, Bruno Peris Vila and Cristobal Ignacio Burgos Sanhueza, Laura Lopez Iglesias, Regiane Fernandes de Oliveira, Taliia Nurutdinova, Matthias Kooijman.

All renderings © Play-Time Barcelona.

All drawings © UNStudio. 

> via UNStudio

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