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Vancouver House

Vancouver House is located at the main entrance to Vancouver, exactly where the Granville bridge triforks when it reaches downtown. The resulting triangular slices of land had previously been undeveloped. When engaged by Westbank to design a residential high-rise for the highly complex site, BIG started by mapping the constraints – setbacks from the streets, a 30-meter setback from the bridge, and a neighboring park had to be protected from shadows. After all the constraints, what was left was a small triangular site nearly too small to build upon. 

photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu

The 30-meter separation from the bridge was defined as the bare-minimum distance until the building reached 30 meters up in the air, after which it could grow back out – allowing BIG to double the floor plate. As a result, Vancouver House emerges subtly from the ground and expands as it rises, appearing like a Genie let out of the bottle. What seems like a surreal gesture is in fact a highly responsive architecture – shaped by its environment. 

photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu

Vancouver House is part of a new phase in Vancouver ’s short but extremely successful history of urban policy. The tower and base are a new interpretation of the local typology deemed “Vancouverism” – a new urbanist podium coupled with a slender tower which seeks to preserve view cones through the city while activating the pedestrian street. The residential tower, in its height and proximity to the creek, is uniquely situated with views to both the water and the mountains, granting visual access to the breadth of Vancouver ’s natural surroundings.  

photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu

As a LEED Platinum building, Vancouver House addresses the community’s desire for truly sustainable urban development. The sustainability strategy began with choosing a location that encompasses smart growth principles and creates a dynamic sustainable hub in a residentially intensive community. Connections to cycling and pedestrian pathways answer neighbors’ needs and reduce reliance on automobile trips.  

photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu

A model for how to approach urban design, the transformation of the Vancouver House site shows how forgotten spaces under, above, and around infrastructure can be reclaimed by the public and offer spaces for art and community gathering. By transforming the underside of the bridge into a venue for public art, the new urban space responds to the city’s shortage of cultural performance and event spaces. Vancouver House becomes not only a visual and cultural amenity, but a symbol of Vancouver’s prioritization of sustainable development improving the health and wellbeing of Vancouverites. 

photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu

“The Vancouver house is a contemporary descendent of the flat iron building in New York City reclaiming the lost spaces for living as the tower escapes the noise and traffic at its base. In the tradition of Flatiron the Vancouver House architecture is not the result of formal excess or architectural idiosyncrasies but rather a child of its circumstances. The trisected site and concerns for neighboring buildings and park spaces.” Bjarke Ingels, Founding Partner, BIG.

photo_credit BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu
BIG and Laurian Ghinitoiu

Team:

Architects: BIG - Bjarke Ingels Group

Client: Westbank Projects Corp.

Collaborators: Dialog (Architect), Integral Group, PFS Studio, Buro Happold, Glotman Simpson, James KM Cheng Architects, LMDG, Nemetz & Associates, HLB Lighting Design, BVDA Façade Engineering, Morrison Hershfield, ICON Pacific

Photographer: Laurian Ghinitoiu
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Vancouver House

Think of Vancouver House as a giant curtain, at the moment of being pulled back to reveal the world to Vancouver and Vancouver to the world. – Bjarke Ingels, Architect.In the center of the bustling Canadian city, the area is trapped within narrow limits, trying to escape upwards. Thus, Vancouver House is born, adopting the "Gesamtkunstwerk" philosophy, a holistic approach to architectural design. 

 
Like a notional turbine, it arises up from its triangular base, making a "dance" movement, striving to reach the highest levels where it becomes squared and imposing. Seemingly asymmetrical openings per floor, eventually formulate a single face which resembles a built wall. Covered by glass surfaces, they ensure the high energy efficiency demands (LEED-platinum award), while at the same time contribute greatly to the expression of the original architectural concept of linking Granville Street Bridge to the city center as a kind of "control tower". Fine, clear, white lines of minimal character compose the interior, allowing natural light to underline the interior aesthetics and at the same time, serve as a natural link between internal and external space.

Particularly, the systems which were selected for the apartments of the Vancouver House, are the advanced and highly insulated Lift & Slide system SUPREME S700 and the top performance casement window system SUPREME S77. These 2 Alumil Systems guaranteed the performance needed to comply with the project needs, by combining also the most minimal and architectural compelling aesthetics.AQL 2,5 Quality Norm was followed for this specific project because of high-quality expectations and resulted in QA and QC performance of 98,5% mark

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Achievements and Awards

2012 - World Architecture News (WAN) Awards, Winner in the category: Residential
2014 - Rethinking the Future Awards, 1st place for the concept of mixed-used building
2015 - Future Project of the year, World Architecture Festival 2015
2015 - Canadian Architects Excellence Award

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