The Business School at the University of Technology (UTS), Sydney recently commissioned Frank Gehry to design and build a new and iconic building.
Named after the principal contributor, the Dr Chau Chak Wing Building, also known as the "crushed paper bag" design by its detractors, has quickly become a must-see, hot-debated architectural feature in Sydney.
Mr Seasons and I checked it out one sunny Sunday September afternoon.
We had watched a program about its design and build and were intrigued.
In real life it is rather stunning from every angle.
I hope the photo's do it justice.
Eastern facade from The Goods Line. |
The UTS website has this to say about it's facade and interior spaces,
"The building’s remarkable exterior is the result of its two distinct facades – one composed of undulating brickwork, referencing the dignified sandstone of Sydney’s urban heritage, and the other of a glass ‘curtain wall’ that mirrors fragments of the building’s contemporary city surrounds."
"Frank Gehry imagined a building that was a cluster of ‘tree houses’, or vertical stacks of office floors with spatial ‘cracks’ in between. This is how he described his vision for the building:
"Each of the larger lower floors is divided into six floor segments. The building façade folds in between these elements bringing natural daylight deep into the centre of the floors."
The interior walls reminded us of the game Jenga. If we pulled one out, would it fall down? |
Polished stainless steel staircase |
Northern facade |
Approaching the Western facade. |
The glass Western facade |
The Ultimo Rd entrance. |
This post is part of Saturday Snapshot