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Amiran anti-reflective double-glazing by Schott

A Schott UK product story
Edited by the Buildingtalk editorial team Oct 5, 2006

BDA proposed the use of Amiran anti-reflective double-glazing by Schott at an at No 1 Grand Canal Square, in Dublin's south docklands area.

Architects Duffy Mitchell O'Donoghue set out a brief for a highly transparent and unique external skin to a speculative office building in Dublin's south docklands area.

The Architect's intention was for the building to act as a translucent foil to the two other highly opaque buildings nearby, the Art and Cultural Centre design by Daniel Libeskind and a Manuel Aires Mateus designed hotel.

The Architect was keen to explore the highly versatile aesthetic nature of glass and was determined to achieve a 'spandrel-less' glazed skin which clearly expressed the superstructure skeleton behind and used external laminated glass fins in a purely structural manner without the use of externally visible metal elements such as point-fixings or support profiles.

Billings Design Associates (BDA) designed a bespoke cladding system involving the use of staggered internal and external structural laminated glass fins with large format double glazing to meet the Architect's brief.

The master plan for the locale stressed the requirement for a vertical emphasis in the composition of the facades while the Architects valued the calmer rhythm brought by the use of the 3.0m bays.

To meet the aesthetic brief of high transparency and in order to express the super structural skeleton, BDA proposed the use of Amiran anti-reflective double-glazing by Schott.

To express the use of glass as a pure structural form the Architect wanted to draw attention to the external glass fins and various traditional options such as ceramic fritting, etching and patterned laminates were considered without satisfaction.

BDA were aware of Schott's dichroic glass product called Narima through its use as a non-structural aesthetic element on the Nord Landesbank building in Hanover and proposed it as an option for consideration.

The Architects were impressed by the unique aesthetic characteristics of the product and the resulting variety in its appearance under different conditions.

As Narima dichroic glass had not previously been used in a laminated structural glass fin construction, with exposed edges and restrained in a unique manner only on the building side, BDA sought verification as to its long-term technical characteristics from a durability and structural point of view.

BDA wrote the method for an extensive prototype testing regime for inclusion in the specification which involved full-scale system testing of the glass construction utilising the Narima fins and individual fin-type structural testing.

This testing regime was undertaken by an independent testing authority over a five day period in Attnang, Austria at the premises of GIG Fassadenbau who had successfully tendered for the glazing sub-contract works.

Concurrently accelerated age/corrosion tests on the Narima glass structural fins were successfully undertaken in the ISF Institute in Aachen University.

Numerous cut sections of the fins were subjected to CASS, SS and KK tests in accordance with DIN Standards and examined for de-bonding, de-lamination and discolouration.

The vast majority of the glazing works are now installed and the glazing system and elements for this highly bespoke glazing solution have been successfully procured within budget and on programme thanks to all parties involved in the project.

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