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With a strong emphasis on sustainable design the Autodesk fit-out proves an apt inclusion

View of the Solaris building with AutoDesk fit-out, architecture, café, cafeteria, ceiling, chair, conference hall, daylighting, furniture, interior design, office, product design, table, gray, white
View of the Solaris building with AutoDesk fit-out, clean-lined reception area, gallery and staircase in stone, timber and steel and exposed ceilings.

As a hub for digital media and a benchmark for sustainable design, Solaris attracted forward-thinking tenants at the spearhead of the industry. One such company was Autodesk, a world leader in 3-D design, manufacturing, construction, building, engineering and entertainment software.

Moving into Solaris brought the opportunity to create the company's first green office in the Asia-Pacific, and seventh worldwide, says Lynelle Cameron, director of sustainability at Autodesk.

"The new office is seeking LEED Platinum Certification for Commercial Interiors. This is the highest possible certification level in this category, and, if received, would be Singapore's first such award. The facility is also hoping to achieve Green Mark Platinum certification from Singapore's Building and Construction Authority."

The fit-out was undertaken by the Singaporean arm of international design practice Aedas Interiors, with Eric Magno as project designer. Autodesk asked Aedas Interiors to approach the project from a strategic workplace angle involving space planning, the attraction and retention of top performers, the health of staff, and ecological footprint. It was an egalitarian process, shared between client, staff and designers, says Magno.

"Working with strategic consultancy DEGW and the client, we ensured every aspect of the project would be appropriate to current and envisioned future work flows. The underlying components of the design and planning seem simple, but resulted from a long and complex gestation period."


View of the Solaris building with AutoDesk fit-out, ceiling, daylighting, interior design, office, gray
View of the Solaris building with AutoDesk fit-out, clean-lined reception area, gallery and staircase in stone, timber and steel and exposed ceilings.

Autodesk occupies levels four, five and six of Solaris. Level four is the reception floor, where most of the conference rooms are located. These are divided by operable walls and each can combine with another conference room, breakout area and the play room for large-scale events.

Further conference rooms are on level five, including the telepresence room, with the sixth floor half occupied. Each level has private offices, breakout and meeting rooms, laboratories and collaboration areas. Most have open workstations.

Levels four and five are connected by a feature internal staircase the core element in these new premises. It is a visual as well as a physical link, essential to the cohesiveness of the entire space and by extension, to a sense of team togetherness.

General office spaces have Echo Panel tack boards and Wall Talker writing walls to aid impromptu discussions. Aside from these usable walls, the general office space has eco-friendly workstations and chairs from Herman Miller.

"Exposing the building elements in the offices calls to mind the client's 3-D software products and the issues of design and construction that its customers deal with every day," Magno says.

View of the Solaris building with AutoDesk fit-out, architecture, building, daylighting, floor, flooring, glass, handrail, interior design, lobby, stairs, wood, black
View of the Solaris building with AutoDesk fit-out, clean-lined reception area, gallery and staircase in stone, timber and steel and exposed ceilings.

Appropriately, Aedas Interiors used the client company's Autodesk Revit Architecture software on the project.

"I think our biggest challenge was designing the office to achieve LEED Platinum accreditation," says Magno. "We achieved valuable extra points by specifying low-emission finishes, efficient lighting and sanitary fittings. In addition, we recycled ceiling boards and light fittings for back-of-house rooms and the centre spine, where the main duct runs."

Cameron says, "Although our overall building stock and associated carbon footprint is relatively small compared to many other large companies, Autodesk strives to implement best practices to consistently measure, manage and reduce its impact. With more than 40% of global energy use attributable to buildings, together with our customers we face the challenge of designing high-performance office spaces and optimising the operation of our buildings.

"Relying on Building Information Modelling and our company's portfolio of sustainable design solutions makes it easy for us to demonstrate eco-responsible decision making."

Credit list

Autodesk fit-out proves an apt inclusion Location
Autodesk, North Tower, Solaris, Singapore
Interior design
Aedas Interiors, design team, Phillips Connor, Eric Magno, Tong Lee Ang, Tiwe Tan, Neha Tandon, Winy Wijaya
Civil engineer
Web Structures
Project manager, quantity surveyor
Faithful + Gould
AV Consultant
RED Technologies
Carpet
Vibrations, In Motion, Currents by Tandus Asia
Wall treatments
Fabric panelling from Infinity; acoustic panelling, Echo Panel by Woven Image; whiteboard wall covering by Goodrich Global
Lighting
Zumtobel Spheros, Modoluce Discovolante, Erco from Bizlink Associates
Workstations
Abak by Herman Miller from Xtra
Reception furniture
Tacchini Moon from Stylecraft
Collaboration area furniture
Parcs from Bene; Orangebox by Tarn and Point from BW
Architect
Aedas
Construction
OSS Technologies
Mechanical and electrical engineer
CPG Consultants
Lighting designer
Lighting Design Partnership
Acoustics consultant
Acviron Acoustics Consultants
Hardware
Dorma
Veneers
Toseva Timber
Timber flooring
Palm Wood Enito from Goodrich Global
Office chairs
Caper, Mirra by Herman Miller from Xtra
Meeting room furniture
Filo table from Bene; Roll’n’Meet table by Kusch+Co from Xtra

Story by: Trendsideas

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