AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


Research and Development Nanocenter

Authors

;

Term

4. term

Publication year

2016

Submitted on

Pages

115

Abstract

This thesis presents a design proposal for a Research and Development Nanocenter in western Amsterdam intended to catalyze collaboration among science, business, and education. The central question is how architectural and urban design can spatially and technically enable such synergy while regenerating the site and meeting specific technical and safety demands. Using an integrated design approach based on problem-based learning, iterative analysis–sketching–synthesis, mapping, and perception studies inspired by Kevin Lynch, the project draws on case studies and extensive site analyses (noise, soil, climate, access, urban structure, activities) to define program and design parameters. The proposal organizes collaborative workspaces and shared areas for knowledge exchange, emphasizes tectonic and sustainable qualities, and addresses logistics, flows, and perceived security. Key design elements explored include site placement and volume, an atrium and its roof, a pronounced cantilever, structural principles, and environmental load assessments with optimization for the atrium roof and cantilever. The work frames nanotechnology as a timely field with broad societal applications and argues for facilities that support innovation and commercialization. Within this excerpt, outcomes are presented as a coherent design strategy rather than measured performance, illustrating how the scheme integrates context, sustainability, and constructability to support R&D collaboration.

Dette speciale præsenterer et designforslag til et forsknings- og udviklingsnanocenter i det vestlige Amsterdam, der skal katalysere samarbejde mellem videnskab, erhverv og uddannelse. Det centrale spørgsmål er, hvordan arkitektur og bydesign rumligt og teknisk kan muliggøre sådan synergi samtidig med at stedet regenereres og specifikke tekniske og sikkerhedsmæssige krav opfyldes. Med en integreret designtilgang baseret på problemorienteret læring, iterativ analyse–skitsering–syntese, kortlægning og perceptionsstudier inspireret af Kevin Lynch, bygger projektet på casestudier og omfattende stedanalyser (støj, jordbund, klima, adgang, bystruktur, aktiviteter) for at definere program og designparametre. Forslaget organiserer samarbejdsorienterede arbejdsområder og delte zoner for vidensudveksling, vægter tektoniske og bæredygtige kvaliteter og adresserer logistik, flows og oplevet tryghed. Nøgleelementer omfatter placering og volumen, et atrium og dets tag, en markant udkragning, konstruktionsprincipper samt vurdering og optimering af miljølaster for atriumtag og udkragning. Arbejdet rammesætter nanoteknologi som et aktuelt felt med brede samfundsanvendelser og argumenterer for faciliteter, der understøtter innovation og kommercialisering. I dette uddrag præsenteres resultaterne som en sammenhængende designstrategi frem for målte ydelser og viser, hvordan forslaget integrerer kontekst, bæredygtighed og bygbarhed til støtte for F&U-samarbejde.

[This apstract has been generated with the help of AI directly from the project full text]

Other projects by the authors

Karalaitis, Zygimantas:

Surblys, Tomas: