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Centrale elettrica sostenibile – L’Architecture Prize 2011 Concrete all’Iller Hydroelectric Plant

Architettura scultorea come un’opera di Moore, è Iller Hydroelectric Plant, la nuova centrale idroelettrica di Kempten in Germania, progettata dallo studio Becker Architekten. Un binomio tra tecnologia e bellezza architettonica riconosciuta dall’Architecture Prize 2011 Concrete, dal pbb German commercial award 2010 e come finalista dal 2010 Liechtenstein International Award per l’edilizia sostenibile dell’arco alpino.
Una struttura sinuosa ed ondeggiante in cemento bianco, simile ad un insieme di pietre erose dalle acque del suo fiume Iller, ha anche una pista pedonale ed una ciclabile in acciaio. L”interno, ruvido e colorato dato delle tavole in legno e dalle tubature rosse, v’è collocata la sala delle turbine che rispetta i più elevati standard di isolamento acustico.
Realizzazione, in sostituzione di un modello del 1950, nell’assoluto rispetto della flora, della fauna e delle necessità energetiche per 3.000 case (circa la metà della popolazione) con un totale di 10,5 milioni di chilowatt di elettricità l’ora.
Continua a leggere su Archilight
http://www.archilight.it/GetPage.pub_do?id=8a8a8ab711a17da80111a2749a7304be&_JPFORCEDINFO=8a8a8ab7318a7c72013230fb0b750349

A sculptural architecture like a work of Moore, the Iller Hydroelectric Plant, the new hydroelectric plant of Kempten in Germany designed by Becker Architekten is a combination of technology and architectonical beauty, which was recently awarded with the Architecture Prize 2011 Concrete, the pbb German commercial award 2010 and short-listed in the 2010 Liechtenstein International Award
for sustainable building in the Alps.
A sinuous and wavy structure in white concrete, like an assembly of rocks eroded by the water of the Iller River, including a pedestrian route and a cycle lane made of steel. The interior is coarse and coloured by wooden panels and red pipes and houses the turbines room that was built according to the highest sound-proofing standards.
The construction, which replaced an existing structure dating back to 1950, fully respects the surrounding flora and fauna as well as the energy needs of 3,000 homes (nearly half of the population) with a total of 10.5 million kilowatt of electricity produced per hour.
Read on Archilight
http://www.archilight.it/GetPage.pub_do?id=8a8a8ab711a17da80111a2749a7304be&_JPFORCEDINFO=8a8a8ab7318a7c72013230fb0b750349&language=ENG

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