Towering triumph for unusual pair of buildings in Abu Dhabi

Computer-controlled sunscreens featured on two of the strangest-looking towers in Abu Dhabi have helped the buildings to win an international award for innovation.

Computer-controlled sunscreens featured on two of the strangest-looking buildings in Abu Dhabi - the Al Bahar towers - have helped them to win an international award for innovation. (Silvia Razgova / The National)
Powered by automated translation

Computer-controlled sunscreens featured on two of the strangest-looking towers in Abu Dhabi have helped the buildings to win an international award for innovation.
Al Bahar towers in the capital, home to the new headquarters for the Abu Dhabi Investment Council, earned the first innovation accolade under this year's best tall buildings awards, revealed the Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat, a Chicago-based association. The two towers are adorned with hundreds of screens, which operate like umbrellas that open and close to shade the surface of the buildings from the sun.
"The dynamic facade on Al Bahar, computer-controlled to respond to optimal solar and light conditions, has never been achieved on this scale before," said Antony Wood, the council's executive director.
"The way you're seeing it now, it will probably never look like that again, in that the mashrabiya - as we call it - on the building will actually open and close as the sun moves round the building throughout the day," said Peter Oborn, the deputy chairman of Aedas, the architect for the project.
"At night they will all fold, so they will all close, so you'll see more of the facade," he added. "As the sun rises in the morning in the east, the mashrabiya along the east of the building will all begin to close and as the sun moves round the building, then that whole vertical strip of mashrabiya will move with the sun."
No value has been disclosed for the project, which is due to be completed in a couple of months.
The building was designed as a modern interpretation of the traditional mashrabiya, the complex wooden-lattice screens found in many Middle Eastern buildings that help to reduce heat from the sun in the building and therefore reduce the use of air-conditioning.
"It allows us to use more naturally tinted glass, which lets more light in so you have better views and less need of artificial light," Mr Oborn said. "It's using an old technique in a modern way, which also responds to the aspiration of the emirate to take a leadership role in the area of sustainability."
Meanwhile, the Burj Qatar in Doha was the winner in the regional award category.
The council's best tall building awards are judged by a panel of industry executives.
A record number - 82 - of towers taller than 200 metres were completed last year, compared to 32 in 2005, according to the council. A further 96 are projected to be completed this year.
"The winners display remarkable creativity, as well as a respect for the environment, connection with place, and the urban surroundings," said Richard Cook, the awards committee chairman and founding partner of Cook+Fox Architects.
rbundhun@thenational.ae
twitter: Follow and share our breaking business news. Follow us
iPad users can follow our twitterfeed via Flipboard - just search for Ind_Insights on the app.