Half Dose #35: QBG Visitor's Center

While the new Visitor's Center for the Queens Botanical Garden doesn't open to the public until September 28, I was able to check it out during a Green Drinks night on Tuesday.

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Unfortunately missing a tour of the interior, the main draw is obviously the building's sheltered plaza, seen above in the approach from the Main Street entrance. As my friends pointed out, the columns -- set at various angles in a manner resembling a project (PDF link, see page 4) by Zaha Hadid -- resemble tree trunks, a metaphor that will be strengthened when they are painted a dark brown.

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The large asymmetrical canopy is designed to collect rainwater, to be used for gray water in toilets and for the pool in the left foreground of the above image. Materials inside and out (per a conversation with the Assistant Director of the Center) are geared towards achieving LEED Platinum status. For example, the horizontal wood slats overlooking the covered plaza are salvaged, as was the wood used to form the concrete volume visible in the last image.

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In addition to the building's materiality and incorporation of sustainable processes, the Visitor's Center is integrated into the site via a green roof that slopes from the garden level to the top of the auditorium (to the right of the guardrails evident in the picture below). The building can be accessed from this upper level, allowing the garden to flow towards the Center and make for a fitting entry when the building is complete and the main entry to the Botanical Garden is reoriented.

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Links:
:: Queens Botanical Garden
:: BKSK Architects
:: LEED
:: Green Drinks

Comments

  1. excellent... this looks promising... is the exterior at least accessible right now to check out? I will be in NY city for a week starting on the 24th and I will be making at least a day out of seeing the Brooklyn and Queens area...

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  2. In the top photo you can see there's a construction fence, so you might have to contend with that. It might be worth e-mailing them beforehand to ask permission. It's not really a construction site, per se, as they're in the midst of punch lists. The danger to people is pretty minimal, especially as the building's actually occupied by the staff. I'm guessing they're fencing it off mainly to keep people from damaging the landscape and because of occasional holes in the pavement.

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  3. It seems very nice...

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  4. Yes the exterior is accessible and some parts of the building are open to visitors.

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