This New Melbourne Apartment Building Changes Colour with the Weather

Each night the Docklands high-rise will perform a light show depicting "how the weather feels".

Docklands apartment building in Melbourne, Australia

Photo: Lendlease

Melbournians love to proudly — and loudly — lament the city’s ever-changing weather conditions.  It’s the ultimate water cooler talking point and the ‘four seasons in a day’ gimmick is thrown around at least once a day.  We love to talk about the weather so much we now have a building dedicated to the topic.

Melbourne’s newest high-rise 888 Collins isn’t your standard apartment block — the 15-storey exterior is fitted with 58,000 lights which, from dusk until midnight, perform an hourly light show for the masses.  The show isn’t just for spectacle, though.  The colours indicate the real-time weather conditions outside and so are, like the weather, constantly changing.

Docklands apartment building in Melbourne, Australia

Final touches are applied to the new lights. Photo: Leigh Henningham

This feat was accomplished by artist Bruce Ramus, whose experience as a lighting designer includes work for the likes of R.E.M, U2 and David Bowie.  It was easy for Ramus to notice the city’s obsession with the weather and he felt creating an artwork that “interprets how the weather feels” was the best homage to locals, he told The Age.

Docklands apartment building in Melbourne, Australia

The lights change colour to reflect the weather conditions. Photo: Leigh Henningham

The building is located on the corner of Collins and Bourke Streets, down the Docklands end of the CBD.  In order to predict the weather accurately, the roof is fitted with a weather station and fed data from the Bureau of Meteorology.  The building is also solar powered, which provides power both for the lights and the building itself.

Docklands apartment building in Melbourne, Australia

Photo: Leigh Henningham

While the idea of an eco-friendly building that depicts our love/hate relationship with the weather is right up our alley, we’re not sure how keen we’d be to live in it.  But Ramus has ensured residents that he has considered them in the design; the light output is far below the city’s guidelines and the show  “is very gentle”.  If you want to head down to Docklands and check it out for your self, Ramus has put together a handy guide for how to ‘read’ the building.

Though the show ends at midnight, the building’s lights will remain on throughout the night, depicting images of the moon straight on to morning.  Now isn’t that just dreamy.

Via The Age.

SOURCE: CONCRETE PLAYGROUND
POSTED: July 15, 2016
AUTHOR: Marissa Ciampi

Australian Luxury Estate News
Related Posts
This New Melbourne Apartment Building Changes Colour with the Weather