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Keelung Harbor Service Building by Neil M. Denari Architects + Fei & Cheng Associates

Keelung Harbor Service Building

Project: Keelung Harbor Service Building
Designed by Neil M. Denari Architects
Executive Architects: Fei & Cheng Associates, Taipei
Structural and Façade: Thornton Tomasetti, Los Angeles
Logistics and Environmental: ARUP, Hong Kong 
Location: Keelung City, Taiwan 
Website: www.nmda-inc.com & www.fca.com.t
Neil M. Denari Architects + Fei & Cheng Associates shapes the impressive design for Keelung Harbor Service Building in Taiwan.

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From the Architects:

The international competition for the New Keelung Harbor Service Project, won by NMDA in September 2012, presented an opportunity to expand on many issues that the office has been working on over the last few years, including our explorations into mass, shaped windows, and clean yet complex developable surface geometry.

The Port of Keelung serves, at times, 10,000 cruise ship passengers a day, making it Taiwan’s largest port of entry into the country. Keelung lies on the Northern Coast of Taiwan, 23 kilometers Northeast of Taipei on the often cloud covered slopes of the Keelung Mountains. Known as the rainy port, Keelung with its wet climate, has a lush green collar surrounding its 350,000 inhabitants. For NMDA, the specifics of the site both locally and regionally have impacted the design in its massing and materials and colors.

Site phasing has dictated that the terminal, which will enter construction in 2013, will be located within a first phase construction zone that is 55 meters deep. This precipitated a linear organization to the terminal, a complex set of port programs layered across three main floors. The main entry and boarding corridor are located at +7:00m, while the shopping mezzanine and boardwalk are at +13.00m. Shaped by these parameters as well as the functional circuitry of the various pathways and hardware of movement, the terminal extracts formal properties from programmatic limits. ETFE skylights hover over voids lined with stainless steel mesh, a diaphanous surface intended to refract light into the terminal spaces.

The Northern end of the terminal turns vertical as it supports a cantilevered scenic restaurant, which itself becomes a bridge to the second phase office complex. Below the Gateway Tower is a boardwalk called “the Shoelace” that forms a connective loop / roundabout to other directions on the boardwalk level.

Across the main drop off road, the main office building which will house the Harbor authority, police station, a large post office transfer facilities, a weather station, and a vast array of harbor support offices, is a 53,000 square meter, 70 meter tall structure. Based on a courtyard type, the building is a distorted and punctured form whose specific cantilevers and surface orientations are based on prevailing views and breezes. Punched windows move across two floors and in various directions, two attributes that change the perception of the size of the building.

The main mass opens up at the lower floors on the street/access side of the site, exposing chartreuse and sea foam green circulation cores, creating an in-between reading of a hollowed out solid and a building on columns.

An expansive public plaza occupies the roof of the service base of the site. The plaza is connected to pathways that move in and around the office building and the terminal that connect with the seaside boardwalk.

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