BAD. Built by Associative Data is a young international design and architectural practice with several offices in Spain (Barcelona), Dublin (Ireland), Lebanon (Beirut). At BAD. our design methodology focuses on the careful generation, processing, and analyzing of project specific data for the purpose of optimizing important design decisions. Our designers are leading experts in the application of computational design techniques in the architectural design and construction industry.
We are more than happy to reveal one of our latest projects at BAD. Built by Associative Data
‘One Independence Square’ is the last project on Martyr’s square. It is where elegance has found a new address. The project is designed by BAD. Built by Associative Data, and is developed by Hejeij Group, in collaboration with OAB, Carlos Ferrater, and Vicente Guallart. As an extension to Beirut’s most important plaza, Martyr’s Square, the building becomes a mere reflection of the long-lived historic series of revolutionary and cultural events that sprung from these charged land.
The project is designed by BAD. Built by Associative Data and is located in the heart of Downtown Beirut. It faces the Mohammad Al-Amin grand mosque, and is in-between, on one side, Renzo Piano’s Beirut City History Museum, and on the opposing side, the Renzo Piano’s Saifi tower. It houses premium retail and luxurious office spaces, while offering a direct access from the Martyr’s square, through a lax pedestrian ramp. The emphasis on the ground floor lies in the shortcut that symmetrically cuts right through the building. It richly creates a clear dialogue with one of Beirut’s largest squares, while instantly, reconnecting one with a sky lobby upon entry.
Normally, architects’ challenges escalate in the building’s skin design, yet in this case, the structural challenges took over. Being the structural art piece that it is, the building mainly hangs from a superstructure that carefully considers seismic design. It, so elegantly, stands on steel columns, with white concrete reinforcement. The building’s core is placed in the back façade, making it almost invisible.
What makes the building in fact so peculiar is its unusual construction process, a top-to-bottom method. The outer skin of the building is set upright, and then follows its other components at a later stage. The steel columns first erect, after which lie on top, superstructure steel beams at uniform intervals. From these super structure beams, the cables and slabs are suspended. The slabs are inserted within the outer structural bands, pulled up with the cables, tightened to ensure maximum tensile strength, and connected to the columns; as if detached from the rest of the structure. This delicate connection allows flexibility in the offices layouts, creating open spaces of big spans. Embracing all the slabs, the glass sets the illusion right for the seemingly free glass cube. Also, on the upper floors, the offices revel in an unobstructed 360 view of their surroundings. Dangling in a glass box, the slabs float in a vast free-span space, creating a whole other kind of experience. The building will gracefully rise in 2018, reminding all of Martyr’s square’s history of Independence.