TEAM: Carlos Arnaiz, Laura del Pino, Jun Deng, Gaby San Roman, Ignacio Revenga, Valentina Buratti, Yuan Jin, Kelvin Tseng, Jiajun Zhang, Simran Singh
CONSULTANTS: ARUP, NSI Architecture Planner Consultancy, Landstyle
RENDERING AND ANIMATION TEAM: iddqd Studio
By designing an office building that doubles as a piece of Green infrastructure, we have created an icon for the BCDA. The entire building sustains life at different levels. Like a mountain, it’s strata supports a variety of habitats for the cultivation of native landscapes, enabling people to experience the natural diversity of the Philippines while working in an office building.
The new BCDA building is a multi-level landscape beginning from an expansive public park on grade to a vertically-hanging arboretum along the circulation cores, and up towards a health-themed urban roof farm.
The new BCDA building is both an ecological machine and environmental museum: the vertical arboretum harvests water to display plant species that live in different parts of the Philippines, the urban farm reduces the building’s heat load while supplying local produce to the public, and the wellness center turns a fitness hub into a net-zero energy display. The building reinforces the BCDA’s critical role in infrastructural development.
An office building today is no longer a sealed hermetic box. Workspaces are recognized as environments with as much complexity and nuance as natural eco-systems. Office workers seek access to a range of services that enable productivity through dense networks of group affiliations. Our places of work must not only meet global performative standards but must also be ecologically sustainable through open networks of system exchange. The digital revolution is remaking our concept of work, making it possible to be anywhere, thereby necessitating that the “here” of our workspaces be justified through robust connections to nature and technology.
The building’s vertical arboretum which rolls its way up from the park to the building’s crown is accessible at each floor and offers people the opportunity to meet in a spectacular green setting in the sky with panoramic views of the city beyond. The green pods that make up the arboretum are an engineering marvel of diversity that represent an ecological equivalent of today’s interconnected networks of communication.
The BCDA building occupies 10% of the site opening up over 6,000 square meters to the public as a park with gardens, art pieces, play spaces and an outdoor amphitheater. The park will be the largest
privately managed public space at the BGC and will connect to a cultural facility programmed around the theme of urbanization, called the CITIES LAB. The CITIES LAB will be a place where people can learn about our changing urban environment as more of the world’s population become city dwellers.
The 21st century is the age of nature and the new BCDA building is designed as an icon for this emerging eco-consciousness. We have crafted a masterful work of architecture for the Philippines that through its daily use imparts the vision of an ecological future that is at once positively inspiring and exhilarating to experience.