Hanging Garden Gets Green Light

Hanging Garden Gets Green Light

A new landmark tower of glass and steel, designed to become the heart of a new arts, culture, and sports quarter for the city of Ekaterinburg also houses a vertical garden’ the only one of its kind in the world.

An international design competition for a new landmark development in Russia’s third largest city, Ekaterinburg has been won by an alliance between developer Vector-Stroy and French holding Vinci Construction Grands Projets with UK-based international architectural firm RMJM. Capital of the vast Ural region on the edge of Siberia, Ekaterinburg is currently enjoying an unprecedented level of investment as the city aims to become a regional business hub on par with Moscow.

In June 2008, RMJM, unveiled exclusive images of a tower building with vertical ‘hanging garden’. Believed to be one of its kinds in the world, it is also topped by a public sky park at the building’s pinnacle offering panoramic view of the city!

Matt Cartwright, a director of RMJM said: “Tall buildings will play an important role in the future of modern cities and the focus for all cities, including London, should be on making these buildings environmentally sustainable so we preserve the environment, conserve energy and provide healthy working and living spaces.”

He added: “Building tall can mean a smaller building footprint, allowing for more space for the parks, rivers and green public space that are vital for a city.”

Inspired by the city’s heritage and developed for the Red Group, the tower has a contemporary vertical evergreen park running through the core of the building demonstrating that tall buildings also provide an opportunity to create new green public space for a city. The project is designed for the enjoyment of the general public as well as those who live and work in the building.

Hanging Garden Gets Green Light
The proposed development will not only provide the city with 46,000m2of serviced apartments and an international standard five star hotel but also the world’s first vertical park. Forming the heart of a new arts, culture and sports quarter on the banks of the river Iset, the arched form of the proposed 100 metre structure echoes the poetic curves of the city’s Byzantine Temple of Blood. And behind the glass and steel exterior of the tower will lie a vertical, hanging evergreen park running through the atrium at the heart of the building.

Matt Cartwright, the architect behind the scheme, explains the thinking behind the unusual idea: “Like many cities in Russia, extreme climates in summer and winter prohibit many people from enjoying public parks and spaces. We decided to bring the outdoors inside and provide the public with a park they can enjoy year round.

“We are delighted to have won the competition and to be able to see our designs become a reality. Ekaterinburg is a city steeped in tradition but which also has a bright future ahead. This new development heralds the start of a new era and signals the investment being made to return Ekaterinburg to the great city it once was.”

The design team explored ways of reducing the energy consumption of the building and it is expected that this development will become a new environmental benchmark for the city. The atrium, for example, will also act as thermal buffer zone to control the building’s temperature.

RMJM has offices in Moscow and St Petersburg and has an estimated £2.5 billion worth of projects in Russia. These projects include the design of the twisting City Palace Tower for the new business district of Moscow and the 396-metre Okhta Tower in St Petersburg. In Ekaterinburg, the architect is also developing designs for a Hotel and an office development for the diplomatic quarter of the city.

MGS Architecture November December 2008

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