Waiwai Tyo

Hai D3 Offices

Hai D3 Offices

HAI D3 OFFICES

Waiwai

ARCHITECTS
Waiwai

CONTRACTOR
Ambb Interiors

SWING DESIGN
Case Design

URBAN PLANNER
Cultural Engineering, Rashid Bin Shabib

ARCHITECT IN CHARGE
Wael Al Awar, Kenichi Teramoto

DESIGN TEAM
Yuka Takeuchi, Sho Ikeya, Takeshi Harikai, Takuma Fujisaki, Makoto Udagawa, Lloyd Fontilla

LIGHTING
PSLAB

AREA
1877 M²

YEAR
2015

LOCATION
Dubai, United Arab Emirates

CATEGORY
Offices Interiors

Text description provided by architect.

Hai d3 is a development that was conceived to be the incubator space for the development of UAE’s hub for emerging local creative talents, the Dubai Design District.

Hai D3 Offices
Hai D3 Offices

It was meant to be a temporary facility with a 5-year program of use, and an 8-month construction schedule.

The complex is intended to welcome a variety of events, exhibitions, collaborative works, and displays to encourage the growth within the different fields of art and design in the Middle East.

Hai D3 Offices
Hai D3 Offices

The development was designed as a neighborhood, bringing into fact that the masterplan of the whole Dubai Design District was meant to develop a community of artists within the region.

Inspired with the efficiency of the traditional Arabic neighborhood planning, the project’s layout was designed to accommodate open spaces, which are further developed into landscaped “pockets” that serve as courtyards for each of the buildings in the complex.

Hai D3 Offices
Hai D3 Offices

These courtyards not only complement the industrial nature of the architecture, but also promote activity, and consequently, vibrancy to the entirety of the site.

These buildings are formed with the use of recycled 40-foot shipping containers that were crafted with the careful consideration to preserve its raw, industrial form.

Hai D3 Offices
Hai D3 Offices

The use of these shipping containers allow an expeditious build and dismantling process that can be helpful to refabricating the architecture, if deemed necessary.

Six different layouts of stacking were implemented, which was formed to directly respond to the space program of the site.

Hai D3 Offices
Hai D3 Offices

Art galleries, a workshop, a library, retail spaces, as well as a cafe and prayer rooms were introduced in the buildings, which were arranged according to the facility’s use.

Annex buildings were also introduced in the project, bringing in 20-foot service containers for toilets and storage, as well as an entrance piece that not only welcomes people to the district, but also serves as a multi-function space which artists can use to host movie screenings, gatherings, or outdoor workshops.

Sustainability was key in designing the development, given the green building initiatives within the region. Passive cooling, through shipping containers designed as “wind towers”, were distributed around the site. 

Hai D3 Offices
Hai D3 Offices

These wind towers promote natural ventilation by catching high draft winds and funneling it towards the courtyards in the site.

Also, passive lighting was employed in buildings with the use of full-height windows and high sidelights, as abundant sunlight is intrinsic in Dubai. 

Hai D3 Offices
Hai D3 Offices

This development, with the use of clean, simple forms, and straightforward but welcoming views, offers its users a platform of flexibility, where they can embrace the dynamism of their work, and in turn, use this as a way to propel the creative industry of the Middle East.


Hai D3 Offices

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