You are on page 1of 14

Zaha Hadids Heydar Aliyev

Cultural Centre: Turning a


Vision into Reality
Written by Kristin Dispenza
Fri, Jun 03, 2011

font size

Zaha Hadid Architects 57,519 m2 (approx. 619,129 sq. ft.) Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre, a mixeduse venue featuring a conference hall, library, and museum, is scheduled to open in September
2011 in the city of Baku, Azerbaijan.

The Setting
The Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre is one of many buildings that will be erected in Azerbaijan this
year, and it is one of several projects exhibiting progressive design elements and cutting-edge
engineering solutions.
The ambitious yet expressive nature of these new structures represents a move away from the
countrys Soviet-dominated past and toward a national identity. The cultural centre, named in honor
of the late Heydar Aliyev, National Leader of Azerbaijan, is located close to the city center. It is part of
a larger redevelopment area and is expected to be a bellwether of the citys intellectual and cultural
life.

The Vision
Zaha Hadid Architects created a building form that appears to emerge from the topography. The skin
of the building a single curving surface rises, undulates, and wraps inward at its base to
completely envelop the buildings various volumes. The curved surface allows a freedom of form that

can simultaneously differentiate and unite the Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre's three distinct
programmatic elements. Its inward curl is formed into stairways and ramps that connect the lower
floors to mezzanine levels; other circulation paths also emanate from the curves of the building
envelope. An elevated bridge connects the library to the conference hall.

It is difficult in general to build something that extraordinary in a remote country


where even very basic tools must be imported sometimes." Thomas Winterstetter,
Werner Sobek
The Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre's conference hall contains three auditoriums. In order to
accommodate the necessary inclined seating, this portion of the building protrudes into the cultural
plaza. Here the mass of the structure undulates away from the wave-like peaks that define the other
two zones of structure; at its edges it flows down to the walking surface of the plaza.

Renderings

Elevations

Floor Plans

Sections

Site Plans

Zaha Hadid's Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre Renderings

The Reality

Zaha Hadid Architects vision of sublimity presented some very material challenges for the engineers
and builders. The curve of the buildings exterior, meant to convey the aspirations and identity of the
Azerbaijan people, needed also to function in more prosaic terms. It was necessary to construct a
building that could seal out the elements and bear high wind and seismic loads without relying on
interior support columns (which would have impeded the flow of space). Ultimately, a system was
devised that utilized a space frame as its main structural element; the cladding is a curtain wall
system comprised of various specially fabricated panels.

Early in the design process, engineers performed a mathematically based computer analysis. It's
good practice to do structural calculations for projects of that kind with a 3D nonlinear finite element
analysis, including special loads like earthquake and high wind loads as present in Baku, says
Thomas Winterstetter of Werner Sobek, project engineer for the Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre. We
did the calculations with two separate full-model 3D finite element programs, in order to compare the
results and not to rely on a single one.

We focused, for example, on easy-to-clean external cladding materials because of the


heavy air pollution There are oil refineries and such nearby, and the cladding is white.
That's how glass fiber reinforced plastic (GFRP) came up, which is dirt-repellent itself.
In general, all building systems are chosen to have high durability and a long lifetime
and low maintenance efforts." Thomas Winterstetter, Werner Sobek
According to Winterstetter, the main structure of the Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre is a mix
of reinforced concrete, steel frame structures, and composite beams and decks. The space frame is
composed of a special steel tube-and-nodes system (a product of MERO-TSK International).
For aesthetic purposes, the cladding needed to give the building a monolithic appearance, not only
to make it read as a continuous volume but also to accomplish the transition to the plaza surface. All
visible seams needed to run parallel to one another, reinforcing the buildings wavelike design. The
cladding material had to meet various practical considerations, such as UV resistance and light
reflectivity. Maintenance was a big consideration, as well, notes Winterstetter. We focused, for
example, on easy-to-clean external cladding materials because of the heavy air pollution There are
oil refineries and such nearby, and the cladding is white. That's how glass fiber reinforced plastic
(GFRP) came up, which is dirt-repellent itself. In general, all building systems are chosen to have
high durability and a long lifetime and low maintenance efforts."

Construction Images

Building Envelope and Exterior Skin Panel Analysis

Zaha Hadid's Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centre Construction Images

Glass fiber reinforced plastics (GFRP) and glass fiber reinforced concrete (GFRC) panels are the
predominant materials used in the faade system. The panels are composed of various layers of
fine-grain high-performance white cement concrete, reinforced with fiber glass mats, says
Winterstetter. It's a very durable and resistive material which can be made very thin, only a few mm
or cm, because there is no concrete cover needed, like for steel reinforcements. By eliminating the
need for steel reinforcing, the panels offer a lightweight construction method, and they can be
individually molded to form the curved shapes required by the design. The panels are cast into
customized single-use molds. The molds are partly from CNC-cut 2D ribs (like a boat's hull) and
partly from 3D-milled styrofoam blocks, says Winterstetter.
Werner Sobek had to generate all of the production information associated with the exterior panels,
so that they could be manufactured, then shipped to the site for installation by local workers. On site,
each panel is lifted by crane, then negotiated into position by hand (which is possible due to the
products light weight). The panels are screwed to fittings on a previously installed metal
substructure. There are about 15,000 panels, each with an individual curved geometry, in sizes up

to a maximum of 1.5 m wide and 7 m long, none equal to another one. There are 40,000 m of 3D
computer-generated substructure metal tubes underneath the panels, no tube equal to another one,
perfectly matching the panels and their fixing positions, says Winterstetter.

The Heydar Aliyev Cultural Centres inner finish material also had to be shaped and fit onto a curved
metal substructure, explains Winterstetter. Here the panels are made of cold-bent two-layer fiberreinforced mineral boards. Resin panels were used for the flooring.

It's good practice to do structural calculations for projects of that kind with a 3D
nonlinear finite element analysis, including special loads like earthquake and high wind
loads as present in Baku." Thomas Winterstetter, Werner Sobek
Although the building cladding was specially manufactured, no special fastener systems were
required. We used standard bolts and screws, standard drilled anchor systems for the concrete, and
so on, says Winterstetter. It is difficult in general to build something that extraordinary in a remote
country where even very basic tools must be imported sometimes.

Building in remote regions is just another layer of complexity in an industry that is becoming more
complex by the day. While architecture has always striven to express itself by exploring the limits of
engineering practice, it is only the current generation that has seen such rapid redefining of those
limits.

You might also like