Dubai has always been a city with a strong maritime heritage that today is transformed by massive wa-terfront developments. Purpose of the Maritime Museum - Research Center is to provide the marine en-thusiasts, environmentalists and tourists with a unique sustainably created sea-based attraction that will serve as an Eco-tourism hot spot. Located in the manmade peninsula of Dubai Maritime City, the project overcomes the natural boundary between the land and the water and invites visitors to stroll on the ocean floor. Relating to both the sea and the city and in constant dialogue between them, the building is an extension of the city to the sea and vice-versa. Conceived as a continuation and a transition through the wide public space, the building dives into the ocean and merges with it.
The museum itself is an artifact, an artificial underwater environment organized under an immense glass roof that has been designed in order to give the maximum view of the ocean and intensify the feeling of diving into the seabed. By optimizing the maritime-themed environment and combining it with breathtak-ing underwater views, the museum reflects in a sincere manner its function.
The building is simultaneusly a vessel that supports the idea of the journey. Interior space is organised through cascading platforms that develop in a successive and continuous manner, allowing visitors to have a panoramic and clear overview of the whole museum’s interior, under a «water roof». Building de-velops as a triangular sharp form, which concentrates the public routes to the museum, through an invit-ing shape that draws visitors to the entrance and distributes them to the interior. The programmatic re-quirements, orientation, and restrained material palette were thoroughly evaluated and considered in or-der to reduce the building’s energy use, ongoing maintenance and provide a sustainable outcome.
Water provides different physical properties when compared to air, such as higher thermal capacity as well as the phase difference of water temperature in relation to the air in different seasons. Also impor-tant is the difference in temperature of surface waters in relation to deep-water layers or currents. Since seawater temperature is always lower than the ambient temperature, placement of the building underwa-ter allows minimizing energy strain on the mechanical systems used for cooling. Water functions as a temperature buffer for the building, while at the same time simulates the ocean's role as a regulator of the world climate.
Presentation of the museum’s collection happens in a direct relation with the ocean’s setting, since the artificial manmade space is fully integrated into the natural underwater environment. The experience evokes a descent to the depths of the ocean. Natural light enters the building through the glass ceiling and as the building sinks, space narrows and the light’s intensity gradually reduces, detaching the building from the surface and making it part of the ocean.
On the upper part of glazed roof, the natural and continuous motion of wave cools the glass, allowing the visitors also to perceive the transition between land and sea as well as the alteration of light conditions. The roof pattern articulation correlates with the structural system which in turn correlates with both exterior shape and the interior development. The roof is perforated with a system of skylights directing natural light into the unified spaces and animating the interiors with the changing density of natural light. The aim was to create a lighting concept that would not only mirror the building’s distinguishing features but also complement the structure.
Overall organization follows a triangular grid, which defines the main morphological and functional as-pects of both building and landscape. This grid organizes the roof cells that are supported by diamond shape structural cores. The volume requires these cores as a serious transfer structure to achieve the necessary clear spans in order to obtain large-scale column-free spaces that allow the visitor to experi-ence the fluidity of the interior. Required distribution of MEP services happens through the cores which also embody the main function of internal circulation.
Circulation network is further organized by the pathways of staircases, ramps and lifts that act as connection points between the different levels and guide the visitors through the exhibition levels. Peo-ple’s flow inside the building follows a specific pattern in a way that the circulation of public itself is in-tended to act as experiential content. The result is a deep relationality and interconnection of spaces that can help achieve an atmosphere of total continuity, like the vast environment of sea.
Project distinctions
German Design Award - Germany, 2017
AIA Middle East Design Awards - Cairo, 2016
Iconic Award - Germany, 2016
Spark International Award - New York, 2016
AAP / American Architecture Prize - New York, 2016
RTF Sustainability Award - India, 2016
A’ Design Award - Italy, 2015