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Passive Energy for Washington D.C., / [presented by] John Andrews (John Andrews International Pty. Ltd.).

Pidgeon Digital Available online

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Format:
Sound recording
Contributor:
Andrews, John, 1933-2019, narrator.
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Architectural design--United States.
Architectural design.
Buildings--Environmental engineering.
Buildings.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (1 video file (27 minutes)): sound, color
Place of Publication:
London, England: Pidgeon Digital, 1984.
Summary:
John Andrews is one of Australia's leading architects. After graduating in the 1950s from Sydney and Harvard Universities, he started practice in Toronto, Canada in 1962. He taught at Toronto University from 1962 to 1969, the last two years as Chairman of the Faculty of Architecture. Since 1970 he has practised in Australia. The buildings that first brought him world attention were Scarborough College, 1965, in Canada, and Gund Hall, 1968, for Harvard Graduate School of Design. He has won many architectural awards for his work including the Australian Gold Medal and the Advanced Australian Award. With a down-to-earth approach to architecture, he says "architecture is nowhere as mystical as many people would have it. It is largely a matter of common sense". The two people whose formative influence he acknowledges are Buckminster Fuller, who admired the efficiency and economy of the boomerang, and Louis Kahn, who said designers should let a building be what it wants to be. In his talk Andrews describes his most recent building, the headquarters for lntelsat in Washington D.C. with which he won an international competition. Intelsat is the international space organisation founded by COMSAT USA, which includes to date (1985) 109 nations. Andrews has provided it with a building which is not only a handsome addition to its surroundings, much appreciated by its users, but in that city of extremes of heat and cold is probably the only building relying entirely on passive energy. Furthermore, despite the depth of the complex, every office has an outside window.
Contents:
John Andrews, 1985
The Intelsat Building. The Site
The Intelsat Building. Site Analysis
The Intelsat Building. Pedestrian Generation
The Intelsat Building. Schematic Plan Of Office Modules & Courts
The Intelsat Building. Planning Concept
The Intelsat Building. Passive Energy System
The Intelsat Building. Naturally Induced Thermal Control
The Intelsat Building. Naturally Induced Air Movement
The Intelsat Building. Section Showing Air Movement
The Intelsat Building. Energy Usage
The Intelsat Building. Energy Consumption
The Intelsat Building. Airviews Of The Complex
The Intelsat Building. Ceremonial Entrance
The Intelsat Building. The Natural Surroundings
The Intelsat Building. Atria
The Intelsat Building. The Complex At Night.
Notes:
Title from publisher's website (viewed April 27, 2021).
Access Restriction:
Restricted for use by site license.

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