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From carpark to contextual community hub

The playful building expression at 3 Te Kehu Way references local ecology and carves out a quiet sanctuary within Auckland's bustling Sylvia Park

3 Te Kehu Way  is the second commercial project in the wider Sylvia Park precinct: an urban-scale precinct transformation comprising retail, residential, commercial, and community infrastructure.

Designed by Woods Bagot and Peddlethorp with landscape design by Boffa Miskell, it marks the next step in Sylvia Park’s evolution from a retail centre to a true mixed-use neighborhood.

Project architect Matt Pieterse says the building’s ground plane was inspired by the region’s ecological history. 

“Research shows that the Mt Wellington area was formerly a pūriri broadleaf forest ecosystem,” says Pieterse.

The pūriri is a native evergreen with a gnarled trunk and brilliant, waxy leaves, endemic to the northern and coastal parts of the North Island.  


“There are a few remaining native forest remnants within Auckland around Mount Eden and the intensity of the green is striking,” says Pieterse.

“The idea for the ground plane was to capture what the experience of occupying the previous ecosystem may have felt like – a complete immersion in vivid green shades.”

The project team used four shades of glazed green brick, custom-made specifically for the project, which have been incorporated around the base of the building and in the façade of the southern low-rise pavilion.

3 Te Kehu Way comprises six levels and 5,800 square metres of net-lettable office space. 

Perched above the green brick podium, Woods Bagot and Peddlethorp designed an intriguing ‘waffle’ façade from precast concrete, incorporating a pronounced grid geometry made from square and cruciform punched shapes.

“The façade was the result of an intensive iteration process in the quest for a cost-effective but innovative solution to a rational precast façade system,” says Pieterse.  

“The windows needed to be centrally located within each concrete panel – it’s a very rigid architectural constraint to work with. We wanted to find a solution that disguised and abstracted this pragmatic reality.”

The resulting façade is a varied and textural form, providing an intriguing counterpoint to the uniform glazing that characterises much of the city’s commercial architecture.

In each façade panel, the vision glazing window is supplemented with two smaller ‘false’ or spandrel windows of various sizes. 

These sit within a partial depth recess in each panel. The additional glazed elements create the appearance of significant variation within the waffle grid from relatively few panel types.”

Collectively, the glazing creates irregular stacks of glass in the façade with edges that seldom align. 

“The unexpected result is one of reflective glass rivers running down the façade,” says Pieterse.

Internally, the irregular window geometries exert a subtle but distinct personality to the office interior. 

A proportion of the spandrel windows function as light boxes, containing a colour-change LED lighting. 

When combined with the office interior lighting, these light boxes play a subtle game of deliberate scale manipulation against the suburban sky.

Comprising the six-storey commercial tower and a low-rise southern pavilion, the building’s L-shaped form is designed to offer shelter from the prevailing winds and protect the public realm from the sound pollution from Mt Wellington Highway. 

The building mass is also specifically tailored to minimise overshadowing of the public realm along Te Tata Avenue.

3 Te Kehu Way continues developer Kiwi Property Group's established focus on sustainability and tenant flexibilty.

Features include:

  • Highly efficient 1,019m² floor plates accommodating occupier density ratios as low as one person per 8m²
  • Floor plates with a southern core configuration to ensure high levels of light saturation to each floor’s northern aspects
  • Reduced column numbers for more flexible tenant configurations
  • Generous 3 m floor-to-ceiling height on each office level–  Scope to create internal stairs between levels
  • Targeted 6 star Green Star rating for sustainable design and build
  • Targeted 5 star NABERSNZ certified rating
  • 100% New Building Standard IL2

Credit list

Project
3 Te Kehu Way, Sylvia Park, Auckland
Architect
Landscape design
Developer
Kiwi Property Group
Architect

Designed by: Woods Bagot & Peddlethorp

Story by: Trendsideas

Photography by: Jono Parker

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