General information

  • Location country
    Germany
  • Function of building
    Office buildings & congress centres
  • Climatic zone
    Temperate - cold winters and mild summers
  • Type of application of the membrane
    internal
  • Primary function of the tensile structure
    • Daylight gains
    • Space defining elements
    • Thermal insulation

Description

'Architect Thomas Herzog has inventively used a translucent membrane to rehabilitate a 1930s industrial steel and glass shed in Munich called the Deckelhalle as a design studio for the Trade Fair and Design arm of Siemens. The 1400 sq m Deckelhalle had no insulation, only basic heating, cast-iron window frames with single glazing, and too much depth in plan for daylight to reach the center of the floor. Siemens sought an energy-saving and ecologically enlightened design proposal with a progressive corporate image. Constraints on exterior appearance required Herzog to leave the original skin untouched except for a new glass roof light and ventilation louvers at the roof ridge and eaves. Inside, new operable windows screen the eye-level band of existing exterior glazing. Above, between the new window lintels and the roof ridge, a translucent membrane hangs from the steel rafters on guy cables, gently enclosing the space like a giant amoeba but revealing the original steel frame and windows behind. Acting as a new interior skin, the tent-like curtaining (K-value 1.8 W/m2/degK) reduces the volume of heated space and insulates by trapping air between membrane and structure. The membrane, constructed by Koch Hightex, is recyclable and biodegradable.'
Architectural Review, Aug 98, p 24, by Layla Dawson.

Description of the environmental conditions

Material of the cover

  • Cable-net/Fabric/Hybrid/Foil
    Foil

Main dimensions and form

  • Form single element
    Anticlastic

Duration of use

  • Temporary or permanent structure
    Permanent

Involved companies

Editor