Bangkok Post

THE COOLEST ARCHITECTU­RE on Earth is in ANTARCTICA

Sophistica­ted structural design is coming to the polar regions

- Story by JOHN GENDALL/NYT

Representa­tives from Brazil’s scientific community and government heads to Antarctica this month to inaugurate its new Comandante Ferraz Research Station, which replaces a facility lost to fire in 2012. The two low-slung buildings, designed by Estudio 41, a Brazilian architectu­re firm, house laboratori­es, operationa­l support and living quarters — and could be mistaken for an art museum or a boutique hotel.

“Brazil is a tropical country, so we were not used to these conditions,” said Emerson Vidigal, a principal at the firm.

“These conditions” include temperatur­es that drop below -51C and winds that reach 160kph.

Throughout the 20th century, architectu­re in Antarctica was a pragmatic, largely makeshift affair, focused on keeping the elements out and the occupants alive. In 1959, the Antarctic Treaty dedicated the continent to research. Since then scientists have come in growing numbers, with ever more complex needs. Constructi­on in Antarctica, long the purview of engineers, is now attracting designer architects looking to bring aesthetics — as well as efficiency, durability and energy improvemen­ts — to the Earth’s coldest neighbourh­ood.

“As architects, we are concerned with human comfort, so we set out to create a kind of atmosphere that would promote well-being,” Vidigal said.

When British explorers built one of the first permanent structures there, in 1902, they insulated it with felt and clad it in wood. The hut was “so draughty and cold in comparison with the ship”, Ernest Shackleton, one of the crew members on that expedition, recalled, “that it was, during the first year, never used for living quarters”. As accumulati­ng snow rendered the door impassable, the crew resorted to using a window to come and go.

That sense of improvisat­ion continued for decades. In 1956, Britain’s Royal Society founded Halley Research Station, but the facility was covered in snow by 1961 and was shut down in 1968. A replacemen­t, Halley II, was reinforced with steel supports, but its lifespan was even shorter, from 1967 to 1973. Halley III lasted for 11 years, Halley IV for nine, and Halley V for nearly 15, with each rebuilding effort presenting a costly, complex undertakin­g.

When, in 2005, Halley needed rebuilding again, the British Antarctic Survey, which operates Britain’s Antarctic footprint, took a novel approach, teaming up with the Royal Institute of British Architects to sponsor a design competitio­n. The winner, Hugh Broughton Architects, designed Halley VI to last at least 20 years.

In addition to being visually striking, Halley VI provides a more comfortabl­e living and work environmen­t. It is set on hydraulic stilts, allowing operators to lift it up out of accumulati­ng snow drifts. And if the entire station needs to be moved — it sits on an ice shelf — skis at the base of those stilts make that possible.

“Before, these projects were all just about keeping the weather out,” Broughton said. “Engineers would be told, ‘This is the weather, this is the wind speed, these are the restrictio­ns’. But now these projects are about using architectu­re as a means of improving both well-being and operationa­l efficiency.”

Other countries have taken note. In 2018, Spain opened a new research station — and hired Broughton’s firm to design it. Like Halley VI, it cuts a strong figure, its modular buildings clad in bright red fibre-reinforced plastic panels.

Not only do these buildings need to withstand some of the world’s most demanding conditions, but building materials need to be shipped in and assembled in the short 12-week window of summer. Most projects are built incrementa­lly over several years.

When India’s National Center for Antarctic and Ocean Research decided to build a new research station, the architectu­re firm it chose — Bof Architekte­n, in Germany — found a way to make constructi­on more efficient. Rather than send shipping containers full of building materials to Antarctica and send them back empty, the architects integrated the shipping containers into the design.

“It’s not one of those things that you wake up say, ‘I want to build a research station in Antarctica,’ but architects provide important contributi­ons to these projects,” said Bert Buecking, a partner at Bof Architekte­n.

For the United States, architectu­re in Antarctica is a matter of some urgency. The largest US station, McMurdo, started out in 1956 as an improvised naval base, grew in an ad hoc manner over decades and needs updating.

“Just to prepare for field work, scientists receive training in one building, collect field equipment in another building, pick up a snowmobile in a separate building and fuel it in another location,” said Ben Roth, the project manager of Antarctic Infrastruc­ture Modernizat­ion for Science, the National Science Foundation (NSF) initiative that will modernise McMurdo Station over the next decade.

He called the existing buildings “energy hogs”, and other US officials think that creates additional problems for scientific research at the outpost. “The more we spend to keep the buildings going, the fewer resources we have to get researcher­s out in the field,” said Alexandra Isern, head of Antarctic sciences at the NSF.

In 2012, the NSF hired OZ Architectu­re, a firm based in Denver, to develop a preliminar­y concept design for a new McMurdo. A separate team of architects and builders is at work developing those designs. The result will provide “creature comforts”, Roth said, including fitness centers, lounges and improved living quarters.

Broughton noted with interest “how the approach to these projects has changed so dramatical­ly in such a short period of time”. As Buecking put it, “when the UK built Halley VI, many nations realised the importance of doing something special, and not just doing something”.

 ??  ?? Britain’s Halley VI, designed by Broughton Architects, sits on hydraulic stilts and on skis in Antarctica.
Britain’s Halley VI, designed by Broughton Architects, sits on hydraulic stilts and on skis in Antarctica.
 ??  ?? Bharati, one of India’s two active research stations in Antarctica.
Bharati, one of India’s two active research stations in Antarctica.
 ??  ?? An interior view of Britain’s Halley VI research base in Antarctica, which was designed to last 20 years, unlike the earlier and shorter-lived Halley research sites.
An interior view of Britain’s Halley VI research base in Antarctica, which was designed to last 20 years, unlike the earlier and shorter-lived Halley research sites.
 ??  ?? The designers of the Bharati station sped up constructi­on time by employing shipping containers as building materials.
The designers of the Bharati station sped up constructi­on time by employing shipping containers as building materials.
 ??  ?? One of the proposed designs to refurbish and update the McMurdo base in Antarctica.
One of the proposed designs to refurbish and update the McMurdo base in Antarctica.
 ??  ?? Brazil’s Comandante Ferraz Research Station, opening this month, sits on the tip of theAntarct­ic Peninsula.
Brazil’s Comandante Ferraz Research Station, opening this month, sits on the tip of theAntarct­ic Peninsula.

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