Lazika Municipality: a sculpture on steel legs.

Reynaers Aluminium as Aluminium Windows and Doors

How unique it must be for a city to consist of just one building. For now, that’s the case in Lazika, a new city being developed along the coast of the Black Sea in Georgia. The young British and Georgian architectural firm Architects of Invention realised a steel municipal building that consists of a Public Service Hall, a wedding hall, terrace and offices. Through their vision, a floating sculptural building on steel legs arose from the marshland.

The Hungarian-born French architect built floating cities on massive pillars, an idea put in practice in some of the world’s largest cities in and around the 1960s. The challenge was to create a sculptural building out of a single material. Because time was extremely tight – the 1500m² municipal building was built in just 168 days – prefabricated steel was the best solution. For the three individual volumes, the stairs and and the lift, however, Reynaers’ CW 50-SC and CS 77 systems are used.

Invisibly linked volumes.

The three different volumes function independently of each other and each have a private entrance from the street. The first volume on the ground floor is the main entrance with a public function. The second volume is a wedding hall with access to a large balcony. The third volume ‘floats’ twenty meters above the ground and consist of offices where the urban development work takes place.

Steel stilts in the swamp.

A solution was devised to sink the eighty piles in the most problematic type of building ground: wetland. The supporting piles are ‘screwed’ into the ground to a depth of 25 metres, eliminating any concerns about potential earthquakes and the expected rise of sea levels due to global warming.


Location: Lazika, Georgia Photography: Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab. Reynaers’ Systems: CW 50-SC, CS 77

Lazika Municipality

Architects of Invention as Architects

Setting the benchmark for a new elevated city: Architects of Invention


Lazika Municipality, Georgia, completed September 2012


The young UK-Georgia-based practice Architects of Invention has completed a new municipality building for a city which is yet to come into being – Lazika. This marine, economic and commercial centre was intended to be one of the largest cities in Georgia. Currently, Lazika's future hangs in the balance, as the new government decides its course of action.


Architects of Invention, alongside engineers Engenuiti, designed a steel-structured building as a part of the development of a new city on the Black Sea coast. The brief was to create a Public Service Hall, a Wedding Hall and Municipal Offices. Work on the project began at the end of January, 2012, and the building was completed in mid-September, 2012. The building was constructed in 168 days with a progressive drafting schedule.


The architects explain that the building is a juxtaposition between a building and a sculpture. It is not divided into floors but is comprised of volumes – each volume of the building can function separately from the other. Architects of Invention co-founder Niko Japaridze explains: ‘Lazika Municipality is a rectilinear experiment in the vertical displacement of solid mass'.


‘This is a series of floating objects – which should set the stage for this new city on the marshlands. The local architecture was historically stilt-supported so there is natural precedent here,’ says Japaridze. He cites Yona Friedman’s ‘floating city’ as the main correlation point for this project.


The ambition of this project was to make a building as a sculpture made out of one material. The suspended volumes create public spaces, separated from each other, forming a monument, and saliently, a benchmark for the new architecture of new futuristic city. Our priority here was the void, not the mass - we began with the empty space - since this is a project of the future and there is no memory to which solid mass might refer. Instead of carving void-space from a cube, we have done the reverse. It is a void with volumes inserted - and each volume has a fragile connection to the others, via the void. For example, there is a red glass tube (the elevators) connecting the lower floors with the top cubic volume - so the experience is of transition, as though through red lens. When you navigate the building, the voids are felt more than the solid forms - it can be daunting at times.


Paul Grimes, director of Engenuiti, describes the structure: ‘The structural frame is constructed from steel, utilizing a series of raking steel columns to produce the dramatic floated upper platform. Challenges include the seismic conditions and the sympathetic employment of local skills to achiev what will be an iconic statement of architectural ambition’.


The foundation solution was for 80 piles 800mm diameter (has been installed through rotary percussion methods) and up to 25m deep. Control of settlements due to organic layers and control of potential liquefaction of the ground during a seismic event were the main concerns.


A key consideration in the design was the need to control costs where possible but also to use local materials and local labour so as to give the maximum benefit to the local economy. Normally this would push the design towards a structural concrete solution in Georgia. However the complexity of the project dictated that the project is best developed using a Structural Steel Framing Solution.


The Site Lazika is a newly founded city on the Black Sea coast, located on previously uninhabited coastal wetlands. Lazika is located one mile to the south of the sea resort Anaklia and 3 miles south of Georgia's border with Abkhazia. The name 'Lazika' refers to the Graeco-Roman name for the region. The city’s existence was announced in December, 2011 by President Saakashvili, and established upon the completion of the Lazika municipality building in September 2012. The city remains in limbo with only one building, the municipality building, having been constructed. Currently, Lazika's future hangs in the balance, as the new government decides its course of action.


The architecture of this particular area (Mengrelia - West Georgia) reflects environmental considerations. The region has high level of humidity and dump soil, so local peoples traditionally built houses on stilts with no foundation to encourage ventilation from underneath and keep the structure dry.


The site is almost at the existing mean sea-level and hence the client needed to be aware of the risks associated with anticipated global warming and subsequent sea level rises which could be in excess of 1m during the next century (based on climate modeling). The water table is between 1 and 1.5 m below ground level. Our main concerns included the control of settlement due to organic layers and the control of potential liquefaction of the ground during a seismic event.


The Caucasus region, in which the site is located, is one of the most seismically active regions in the Alpine-Himalayan collision belt. This seismicity is driven on a global scale by the collision of the African and Arabian tectonic plates with the Eurasian plate. Based on our understanding of the regional geology it is valid to assume one of the worst ground conditions for seismic design – Ground Profile E to EC8. The water table is between 1 to 1.5 m below ground level.


Elevated Plinths The three volumes of this structure are all detached from the ground at different levels. Each of these three shapes are devoted to different functions. Each of these three volumes operates self-sufficiently and has its own entrance from the street but they are also inter-connected. The volume on the ground level is designated as the main Public Services Hall, with easy access at street level. The second volume is dedicated for use as a wedding ceremony hall with direct access to a large terrace. The third volume floats 20m above the ground and contains office spaces. Only pillars and circulation points touch the ground.


The perforated steel-sheet-cladding finishing of the facade of the top volume bring 50% transparency and lend a solid quality to the volume at the same time. The steel frame structure is integrated throughout all parts of the design and this frame is exposed to emphasise the building's technology and spirit of innovation. The top volume have the dimensions of 35mx35m, and its downward projection describes the contours of the building - which is a parallelogram containing positive and negative space.


A specific appearance was given to each functional volume - the transparent (public hall), the semi-transparent (wedding hall), and the translucent (offices). The public hall has clear walls on all four sides. The wedding hall is a dynamic volume where floor, wall and ceiling utilises the same material - and the curve they describe brings dynamics to the adjacent terrace which lies underneath the top volume. The top volume is an enclosed mass, concentrated on the activity of office work, but it too, gives precedence to the void at its centre.


Programme The client needed a public office or a town hall where they could start work on future city planning. They required an accessible Public Service Hall, a Wedding Hall and Offices for about 40 employees, at a size of about 1500 m2.


The functional interaction of the building's programme and the status of the proposed building incited a number of considerations:


• Primarily, the idea of introducing a sculptural object integrated into the landscape rather than a building. Hence very flat geography of the place floating above the ground offices are used to overlook the New City and New International Port. The plinth serves as an office for the employees of the Municipality, while the ground floor volume is dedicated to the Public Services Hall.


• A focus has been given to introducing a raised plinth (20m above the ground), which is devoted to the offices.


• Public Service Hall is positioned on the ground level with easy street access, distinguished frame and no mullion glass panels.


• Introducing the raised plinth as one of the interaction-points of the programme was derived from an analysis of flat geography, public spaces, community life and local climate. The relative access and recreational opportunities for each component of the programme resulted in an optimal development focus to meet all possible public needs.


• The building consists of a ground floor with double-height spaces and with a multipurpose roof, wedding hall and offices. All functions of the building have separate access points.


Lazika Municipality

MUA - Architecture & Placemaking as Architects

Lazika - a new futuristic city yet to come into being, is located to the north of the Black Sea coast in the region of Samegrelo-Zemo Svaneti. Because of its high humidity and damp soil, the region is traditionally known for its stilt houses, which encourage ventilation from underneath and keep the structure dry. 

The brief was to create a one-of-a-kind municipal building with Public Service Hall, a Wedding Hall, and Offices. With this in mind, we aspired to create a sculpture-like structure made solely of steel and glass combinations. 

photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab

The form of the building comprises three steel and glass volumes supported by narrow columns. At a glance, the building is perceived as a series of floating objects. While separately these objects have a function of their own, together they create one whole, a monument that becomes a modern architectural benchmark for the new futuristic city. Yona Friedman's “floating city” was the central reference point for this project.

photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab

A distinct appearance was given to each functional volume; Near the building's base, we encounter the public hall - a rectilinear glass volume with transparent walls on all four sides, curved glass wedding hall is placed in the middle, while the offices, made of a perforated-steel box, are hovering overhead.  

Together with the engineering firm Engenuiti, we completed the building in just 168 days in mid-September 2012. Paul Grimes, director of Engenuiti, describes the structure: ‘The structural frame is constructed from steel, utilizing a series of raking steel columns to produce the dramatic floated upper platform. Challenges include the seismic conditions and the sympathetic employment of local skills to achieve what will be an iconic statement of architectural ambition’.

photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab

Team:
Architect: MUA Architecture & Placemaking / Architects of Invention
Structural Engineer - Engenuiti, Progresi L.T.D. 
Construction Management - Anagi LLC
Steel construction – Atak Engineering 
Photography: Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab

photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab

Material Used:
1. Facade cladding: Stainless Steel, Perforated sheets, Mevaco
2. Doors: Aluminium, Glazed Glass – CS 77, Reynaers
3. Windows: Aluminium, Glazed Glass – CW 50-SC, Reynaers

photo_credit Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Nakanimamasakhlisi Photo Lab
Project Credits
Aluminium Windows and Doors
Construction Management
Structural Engineer
Structural Engineer
Product Spec Sheet

ElementBrandProduct name
Aluminium Windows and DoorsReynaers Aluminium
Facade cladding: Stainless Steel, Perforated sheetsMevaco
Product Spec Sheet
Facade cladding: Stainless Steel, Perforated sheets
by Mevaco
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