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lgn2504
‘Seeds of the Future’ with SentryGlas®
Expressions™ brings
art and light to kindergarten renovation project in Germany
Architects Macro Architekten of Munich used DuPont™ SentryGlas®
Expressions™ technology to help bring more natural daylight, fun
and art into a kindergarten in Dachau, Germany that has been renovated
and transformed from the original 1960s structure.
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| Kindergarten children can play safely
next to the light well balustrade of SentryGlas® Expressions™
decorative laminated glass. Headmistress Frau Böhme says: “It’s
good for the children to be able to play next to this inspiring glass
artwork. The façade and balustrade let lots more light into
our school while allowing the kids to interact freely and safely.” |
Small pupils can play safely in the light-filled mezzanine or gallery
of the newly renovated Kindergarten St Hildegard in Dachau, Germany because
a 14 m2 central light well positioned 2.6 m above ground level is protected
with an attractive, laminated glass balustrade of 1.5 m in height and
7.5 m in length incorporating ‘Seeds of the Future’, a composition
in DuPont™ SentryGlas® Expressions™ decorative laminated
glass.
The renovation project was completed in July 2003 by architects Macro
Architekten of Munich. Macro Architekten is the first architectural firm
to incorporate DuPont™ SentryGlas® Expressions™ decorative
interlayer for laminated glass in a completed project in Europe.
The balustrade, which was laminated by Flachglas Wernberg GmbH Germany
with the help of glass art studio Mago-Glas Studio of Pfreimd, Germany
incorporates a photograph by Andreas Riedmiller of elm tree seeds.
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| ‘Seeds of the Future’, an
attractive balustrade made of DuPont™ SentryGlas® Expressions™
decorative laminated safety glass protects a light well to bring more
natural daylight into the St. Hildegard kindergarten in Dachau, Germany.
This project by architects Macro Architekten of is the first commercial
use of Expressions™ technology in Europe. The laminator is Flachglas
Wernberg of Germany. |
The architects call the SentryGlas® Expressions™ composition
‘Seeds of the Future’ because of the surrounding milieu of
children and educational growth. The ‘nature’ theme was also
chosen because of a tie-in with the school’s patron, St Hildegard
of Bingen, a medieval sage and well-known early writer on the subject
of homeopathic medicine.
The kindergarten headmistress, Frau Böhme, said: “It’s
extremely good for the children to be exposed to this wonderful work of
art, this ‘living design’ which, we can explain to them, relates
to seeds, nature and growth. Thanks to to the new glass façade
and light well the kindergarten is much brighter and more cheerful inside
– and because the balustrade glass is laminated, the children can
play alongside it safely.”
Key architectural feature
The 4.5 x 3 m light well and its decorative laminated glass balustrade
incorporating SentryGlas® Expressions™ technology is a key architectural
feature of the refurbishment of this 1960s building and its transformation
into a modern kindergarten for 3- to 6-year-old children.
According to Macro Architekten partner Franz Kisters, his firm wanted
to bring more natural daylight into the kindergarten, especially between
the ground and first floors. An important part of the plan was to create
a light well between the first and second floors in the place where a
storage cupboard used to be situated, on the first floor.
He commented: “This is a much better use of the space than a cupboard!
The light well with its decorative glass balustrade throws a lovely effect
of shadowing down onto the entry hall on the ground floor as the light
showers down through the glass.
“In tandem with a new laminated glass façade for the kindergarten,
supplied by Wirth of Mingkofen near Munich, the decorative glass balustrade
helps to achieve our goal of opening up the kindergarten, make it more
transparent from the street outside and full of daylight in the interior.”
Kisters said his firm is planning to provide further customized night
illumination of the light well and balustrade. Thanks to the existing
illumination of the transparent glass façade, ‘Seeds of the
Future’ looks beautiful from the street in the evenings. Architect
Kisters went on to say his firm hopes it will become a new Dachau city
landmark.
Macro’s renovation of the Kindergarten St. Hildegard follows a worldwide
architectural trend to bring more natural daylight into schools. John
P. Eberhard FAIA, Chairman of the Washington-based Academy of Neuroscience
for Architecture, recently said: “Our research is already pointing
to the fact that, the more light that is allowed into the building, the
better the people within the building feel – whether it’s
a school, a hospital, a church or an office building.”
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| The St. Hildegard Kindergarten seen from
the street at night with ‘Seeds of the Future’ light well
balustrade illuminated for aesthetic and safety/security reasons.
Architects Macro Architekten hope that ‘Seeds of the Future’
will become a Dachau landmark. |
“Surprisingly easy to implement”, says architect
Kisters said that DuPont™ SentryGlas® Expressions™ technology is “surprisingly
easy” to implement. He continued: “Early on in the project
planning we wanted to make the glass balustrade look attractive and fun
for the sake of the children. We did not know about Expressions™
technology at that point so we assumed we would have to use silk-screening.
“Paul Gora of Maga-Glas Studio told us about SentryGlas® Expressions™
after he read about it in an architectural glass magazine and we were
delighted because this turned out to be a much quicker, easier, controllable
and cost-effective solution for customized designs such as ours.”
The front-end costs of developing screen prints, producing a sample and
adjusting the screens, re-proofing etc. using the silk-screen process
are significantly higher compared to making a one-time print for decorative
glass using SentryGlas® Expressions™ technology.
Architect Kisters continued: “Specifically, after obtaining copyright
permission from the photographer, we simply scanned the page of an image
bank catalog reproduction of his photo using a desktop scanner. We then
sent the 150 pixels per inch (ppi) resolution scans on two CDs to DuPont
who printed the images onto PVB and sent Maga-Glas two sample options
of the finished result in laminated glass, one with a translucent background
and one with a rather more opaque background.
“The whole process, from order to installation of the balustrade,
took about six weeks and we can confirm that compared to silk-screen printing,
the process for our particular job was much simpler and cost substantially
less (a factor of 1:10)! We could not be more pleased with the results!”
“Outstanding quality” says glass laminator
Macro Architekten used a tiled set of seven 1 x 1.6 m panels of laminated
safety glass with Expressions™ decorative glass interlayer. Flachglas
quality manager, Josef Failer confirmed that the balustrade consists of
one inner layer of 6 mm annealed glass with a 1.52 mm layer of SentryGlas®
Expressions™ PVB laminate and a 0.38 mm layer of Soft White Butacite®
PVB followed by a 8 mm annealed glass outer layer.
Failer said that to produce the balustrade using screen-printing would
have been “ten times more expensive because you would have needed
so many repeat screens and you would have had to use four or five films.
Plus, you would not have been able to see the image digitally before it
was installed. We are very pleased with this new technology”.
He continued: “SentryGlas® Expressions™ technology is practical
and relatively simple to use. On receipt of the digital images DuPont
takes care of printing the PVB and producing the samples for the architect’s
approval. We simply had to laminate the PVB and we can attest that the
overall quality is outstanding – on the same level as standard laminated
safety glass.”
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| From left to right: Architect Franz Kisters; DuPont
representatives Hayati Yarkadas and Denise Padden, glass artist Paul
Gora and Flachglass quality controller Josef Failer. |
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