He kōrero takiwā, he takiwā korero/Stories within Spaces, Spaces Defined by Stories: A Footbridge Design Concept for New Zealand
Author(s): |
Ana Isabel Sarkis Fernandez
Gabriele Granello Royce Liu Claudio Cappellaro Alessandro Palermo Paul Millar |
---|---|
Medium: | journal article |
Language(s): | English |
Published in: | Structural Engineering International, October 2018, n. 4, v. 28 |
Page(s): | 418-424 |
DOI: | 10.1080/10168664.2018.1484678 |
Abstract: | This design concept was originated in response to a government-sponsored design contest for the North Frame Pedestrian Bridge (NFPB). The bridge, located on the Ōtākaro/Avon River in Christchurch, New Zealand, is one of a series of post-earthquake recovery projects aimed at attracting people to visit and live in the rebuilding city of Christchurch. The University of Canterbury entered this contest and established a design team of senior Engineering and Fine Arts students, supervised by three professors. The brief required the team to combine a strong design aesthetic with a tightly constrained and functional built object. This resulted in a unique design, fitting for inclusion in the public art collection. The structural system, based on a weathering steel tri-dimensional “Vierendeel” girder/truss, also responds to the art form of a traditional Māori fishing net. Both truss and trap are made of repeated rings, of variable size, connected by an organic net. |
Keywords: |
footbridge conceptual design weathering steel Vierendeel truss art bridge
|
Geographic Locations
- About this
data sheet - Reference-ID
10309587 - Published on:
01/03/2019 - Last updated on:
31/08/2021