Detail View: Archivision Base to Module 9: Imperial College Tanaka Business School

Preferred Title: 
Imperial College Tanaka Business School
Image View: 
South end, showing the entry pavilion with exposed steel grid
Creator: 
Sir Norman Foster and Partners (British architectural firm, founded (as Foster Associates) 1967)
Location: 
site: London, England, United Kingdom
Location Note: 
Exhibition Road, South Kensington
GPS: 
+51.499069-0.174610
Date: 
completed 2004 (creation)
Cultural Context: 
British
Style Period: 
Twenty-first century
Work Type 1: 
college
Work Type 2: 
classroom
Classification: 
architecture
Material: 
glass; steel; ETFE; stainless steel
Technique: 
construction (assembling)
Subjects: 
architectural exteriors; contemporary (1960 to present); Architecture and energy conservation; Education; Sustainable buildings; Green building; technology
Description: 
Sitting amongst existing 1960s institutional buildings and the Grade II listed Royal School of Mines, the Tanaka Business School houses teaching, research and office facilities. The School, with structural, building services, civil, geotechnical, IT, AV and communication systems consultation by Buro Happold, has been divided into two parts: the teaching element is within a new building and the office areas within three refurbished floors of the existing Royal School of Mines. The entire new-build element, together with a new College entrance, is cloaked in a protective envelope, creating a year round usable atrium space within. The 24m-high glass facade will hang from roof and wind loads will be carried back to the columns via slender T-section struts. The atrium is capped with white translucent ETFE pillows measuring 20 x 4.2 metres. These provide better insulation than glass and will admit generous amounts of filtered daylight into the atrium space. In the event of fire the pillows can be released to act as
Collection: 
Archivision Addition Module Four
Identifier: 
1A1-FPA-TBS-B6
Rights: 
© Scott Gilchrist, Archivision, Inc.