Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates

Sequis Tower

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

SEQUIS TOWER

KPF

ARCHITECTS
KPF

AREA
138 m²

PROJECT MANAGER
Daniel Dadoyan, Aia Leed Ap Bd+c

MANUFACTURERS
Bika, China Southern Glass, Henraux Spa, Yuanda

ARCHITECT IN CHARGE
Design Principal: Robert Whitlock, Faia / Design Principal: Jeffrey Kenoff, Aia Ncarb / Managing Principal: Peter Gross, Aia Leed Ap Bd+c / Project Manager: Daniel Dadoyan, Aia Leed Ap Bd+c

DESIGN TEAM
KPF

CLIENT
Pt Farpoint Realty

DESIGN PRINCIPAL
Robert Whitlock, Faia , Jeffrey Kenoff, Aia Ncarb

MANAGING PRINCIPAL
Peter Gross, Aia Leed Ap Bd+c

ARCHITECT OF RECORD
Wiratman Associates

YEAR
2019

PROJECT TEAM
Adrian Au, Nathan Degraaf, Bob Graustein, Emily Mcnally, Julian Merchant, Cristian Piwonka Spichiger, Zehra Ahmed, Benjamin Albury, Molly Chen, Jesus Chuquipoma Quiliche, Emily Clark, Jacopo Colarossi, Ryan Consbruck, Dominique Devlin, Luk Duran Pinto, Tao Jia, Roland Kang, James Kehl, Anthony Kim, Dan Mannino, Jessica Martin, Levy Nguyen, Fausto Nunes, Oscar Obando,

SUSTAINABILITY
BECA

FACADE ENGINEER
Paul Adams Facades

LIGHTING DESIGN
Tillotson Design Associates

TRAFFIC CONSULTANT
Walker Parking

ACOUSTICS
CCW

SECURITY
Kroll

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Thornton Tomasetti

LOCATION
Jakarta, Indonesia

CATEGORIES
Office Buildings

Text description provided by architect.

With its thoughtful urban design, skyline-defining form, and focus on sustainability, the Sequis Tower is a new paradigm for Indonesia’s burgeoning capital.

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

“The design for Sequis Tower starts with a simple rectilinear form, which we turned into a series of bundles, and adjusted their heights to create landscaped terraces,” said Robert Whitlock, FAIA, KPF Design Principal.

“We used the Banyan tree as a metaphor for the tower, rising organically as a series of finely scaled elements.”

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

The tower consists of four bundled and deflected “super-tubes,” nested and offset from one another. This formation not only creates visual interest; it also generates a range of floorplates resulting in unique office types and provides greater structural stability in an active seismic zone.

At the top of the tower, the tubes vary in height to form multiple grand sky-gardens overlooking the city, while at the podium, they extend outward to support larger office floors and increase pedestrian porosity through the site.

Careful analysis of the context and site constraints as well as the goal to optimize efficiency and performance drove the larger design strategy of the building.

In contrast to the standard planning model in Jakarta, for which traffic and parking govern pedestrian connectivity, the tower design addresses the importance of the ground-level pedestrian experience.

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

By pulling on-site traffic circulation below grade and elevating parking, the design frees up the ground plane for green area and pedestrian movement. 

Cantilevered over the pedestrian path at grade, a hovering podium creates a more engaging experience at the tower’s base and forms an outdoor public room shielded from the intense equatorial sun and seasonal rain.

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

The roof of the podium also connects to inner public spaces to form an elevated park that expands the public, urban realm.

“The building envisions a new urban strategy for the district,” said Jeffrey Kenoff, AIA, KPF Design Principal.

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

“At the ground, the project reunites the currently separated adjacent blocks into a sinuous strip of pedestrian connectivity.

In its massing, the distortion of the four bundled tubes yields not only a structural significance but also increases programming opportunities throughout the tower, allowing for large floor plates with public amenities at the base and sky gardens toward the top.

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

The tower wall has a fin density which uniquely increases as it rises, allowing for views while reducing the solar heat gain.”

Sequis Tower integrates a variety of sustainable design strategies to perform 36% better than the LEED baseline.

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

High-efficiency building systems, coupled with a gradated array of fins on the tower’s facade, create an energy-efficient tower by minimizing consumption and addressing solar radiation, while locally-sourced and recycled materials used in construction reduce the amount of embedded energy in the tower.

“One of the tower’s greatest strengths is its environmental responsiveness, and we’re very pleased that the building is one of the first LEED Platinum-certified projects in Indonesia,” said Peter Gross, AIA, KPF Managing Principal.

Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography
Sequis Tower
© Mario Wibowo Photography

“This is reflective of KPF’s commitment to sustainable development throughout the world.”


Sequis Tower
Site Plan
Sequis Tower
Plans


Sequis Tower
Concept
Sequis Tower
Sustainability


Sequis Tower
Density
Sequis Tower
Section


Sequis Tower
Diagram
Sequis Tower
Diagram


Sequis Tower
Structure
Sequis Tower
Analysis
Sequis Tower
Analysis

Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates
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Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates
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