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    Home»Architecture»Bates Smart creates “uniquely Australian” monolithic embassy in DC
    Architecture

    Bates Smart creates “uniquely Australian” monolithic embassy in DC

    Team_HomeDecorDesignerBy Team_HomeDecorDesignerDecember 20, 2024No Comments4 Mins Read
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    Australian architecture studio Bates Smart has referenced Australia’s architectural culture and the “monolithic forms” of its landscape for the design of an embassy in Washington DC, cladding it with glass and copper.


    The building replaces a 1960s embassy constructed by Bates Smart McCutcheon on the same property, bringing the mid-century facility into the 21st century.

    Bates Smart has designed the Australian embassy in Washington DC

    “The progression from the 1967 international style embassy to the new architecture is emblematic of Australia’s emerging art and culture identifying and celebrating what is uniquely Australian,” Simon Swaney, the former managing director of Melbourne-based Bates Smart, said.

    Completed in 2023, the 9,890-square metre (214,094-square foot) complex completes Scott Circle at the intersection of 16th Street and Massachusetts Avenue and transitions from a residential neighborhood to a commercial district. The building’s main entrance is oriented south toward the White House.

    Glass and copper panels on Australian embassy in DC
    Its monolithic form was clad with glass and copper panels

    “The embassy’s monolithic form is inspired by Australia’s iconic landscape and embodies the essence of an ancient and vast continent inhabited by the world’s oldest continuous living culture,” the team said.

    The rectangular form – with the southwestern corner cut off at a slant to accommodate the radial street organization – is clad in alternating vertical bands of reflective glass and folded copper that create “varying degrees of openness”.

    Atrium in Australian embassy in DC
    A large atrium runs on a north-south axis through the structure

    “The appearance of the building changes throughout the day depending on the perspective of the viewer,” the team said.

    “A striking tectonic quality, where large shadow line joints define a series of aggregated forms, creates a dialogue between positive and negative space.”

    At the entrance, the copper bands run down the facade and bend back upwards to form cantilevering fans next to a thin awning. Inside, the entryway transitions to a large atrium that runs along the north-south axis of the building and connects the ground to the sky.

    Wooden interior of Australian embassy in DC
    Australian timber clads much of the day-lit interior

    The atrium is wrapped in bands of Australian timber that transition from rough to smooth – mirroring the “protective qualities of the bark during the eucalypt forest’s cycle of growth, burn and regrowth”.

    While the ground floor is primarily for public functions, the second and third staff levels are divided into social and work zones, separated from the public realm but a security screening area.


    Exterior of the US Embassy in Ankara

    Ennead Architects references traditional Turkish architecture for US Embassy in Ankara


    The second floor contains a large informal bar and a series of breakout spaces linked by a feature staircase. Meanwhile, the upper level is more flexible with a large U-shaped open plan that can adapt to agency requirements.

    Key social and offices are marked by intricate metallic filigree screens that mediate both light and privacy.

    Wooden slatting on embassy
    The building has clearly distinguished public and private programmes

    Bespoke rugs designed after Australian First Nations artworks, handcrafted furniture – that was selected through a partnership with the Design Institute of Australia – and a display of Australian and Indigenous artworks complete the interiors.

    The embassy is targeting a LEED Gold rating and Green Building Council of Australia’s Greenstar rating.

    Recently Bates Smart completed a skinny skyscraper in Melbourne that measures just 11.5 metres wide and proposed a football stadium suspended above Sydney’s Central Station.

    The photography is by Joe Fletcher.


    Project credits:

    Developer: DFAT OPO
    Architect and Interior Designer: Bates Smart
    Architect of record: KCCT
    General contractor: Clark Constructions
    Project manager: Jacobs
    Cost consultants: Rider Levett Bucknall
    Structural and facade engineer: Aurecon/SGH
    Mechanical, electrical, fire, hydraulic, vertical transport, AV, Security/communications consultants: Aurecon/Interface
    Fire engineering, acoustic, ESD consultant: Aurecon/Arup
    Signage: Ongarato
    Traffic consultant: Wells & Associates
    Civil consultant: Aurecon/Sorba
    Kitchen consultant: Chris Live Design/Culinary Advisors
    Landscape consultant: TCL Wiles Mensch
    Lighting consultant: Electrolight/ONE SOURCE
    Townplanning consultant: Holland & Knight
    DDA/OHS consultant: du Chateau Chun



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