호주 멜버른 탄데럼 보도교 Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge


Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge

New Crossing in Victoria, Australia – design by John Wardle Architects / NADAAA / Oculus

13 Sep 2018


Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge in Melbourne

Design: John Wardle Architects & NADAAA in collaboration with Oculus


Location: Batman Avenue, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia

Formerly called Batman Avenue Bridge


The new Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge linking Birrarung Marr (an inner-city park between the central business district and the Yarra River) with the Melbourne Park sports precinct creates a major new arrival address for Melbourne Park.



 

호주 멜버른 탄데럼 보도교


버라룽마르(중부 비즈니스 지역과 야라 강 사이의 도심 공원)와 멜버른 공원 스포츠 구간의 새로운 탄데럼 보행자 교량


보행자 교량의 주요 목표로는 멜버른 공원으로 다니는 보행자를 위한 접근성을 제고하고 방문객들이 배트맨 애비뉴를 횡단할 필요성을 없애주는 안전한 경로를 제공하는 것이 포함되었다. 


비라룽마(Birrarung Marr)공원을 통과하는 경사로가 적합하게 이어진다.

존 와들 건축회사(John Wardle Architects)가 디자인했다.


황기철 콘페이퍼 에디터 큐레이터

Ki Cheol Hwang, conpaper editor, curator



The key objectives of the pedestrian bridge included creating access for pedestrians traveling to Melbourne Park and improving universal access and providing a safe route that would eliminate the need for patrons to cross Batman Avenue at street level. As a result, the bridge serves as a major pedestrian entrance point during the Australian Open. A ramping pathway through Birrarung Marr leads to the bridge proper and its alignment respects the established bridges and landscape topography of the park.


       



Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge in Melbourne


In the design, the architects make an important connection between the historic landscape of Speakers Corner and the outside tennis courts of Melbourne Park across Batman Avenue. Both of these existing spaces are steeped in egalitarian and democratic values – one with a history of regular citizens speaking freely on any subject; the other where a player of any ranking can pick up a tennis racquet in one of the sport’s great precincts.


Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge in Melbourne


The bridge design is slender, a flat steel girder structure that tapers at its edges to achieve the required span across Batman Avenue. The bridge undercroft follows the slope of the existing landscape thus eliminating low forming spaces and settles the bridge into the landscape. The lightweight filigree character of the steel structure provides the framework for a journey which branches into a connective path to Middle Terrace and provides views through toward the Yarra River, Birrarung Marr and the city.


The materials used include: Fabricated steel plate box girder beams, fabricated 34mm diameter steel tube ‘filigree’ balustrading, and poured in place concrete piers. The lightweight industrial quality of nearby steel trussed railway structures, and the treetop structure of the park’s elm branches have both influenced our bridge’s appearance. The result is a filigree character that provides the “framework for a journey”.


Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge in Melbourne


Fine steel circular sections form balustrading and extend to create a branching shape below the bridge deck that draws a veil partially over its structure. The filigree veil of fine steel allows for views through toward the Yarra River, Birrarung Marr and the city. The layering is revealed below the bridge where the veil is absent and the steel girder structure left plain.


It was essential to break the filigree into zones of repeating elements to minimize fabrication time and cost. Each section of filigree is composed of 5 different bend geometries which are mixed and matched to create the illusion of a random pattern. Shop mock-ups were critical to finalize the minimum radius of the filigree pipe bends and the detail of attachment hardware.


Apart from its inherent program to enable pedestrian circulation and its stealth integration into the landscape, the bridge’s recycled steel rods also are designed to be a trellis for the local flora of its surrounding park land.


Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge in Melbourne


Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge Melbourne – Building Information

Architects: John Wardle Architects & NADAAA in collaboration with Oculus

Associate Architects: John Wardle Architects

Client: Major Projects Victoria Department of Jobs, Transport and Resources

Location: Birrarung Marr

General Contractor: Fitzgerald Constructions Australia

Photographers: Kristofer Paulsen, Nils Koenning, and Peter Bennetts


Tanderrum Pedestrian Bridge in Melbourne images / information courtesy of Chicago Athenaeum

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