When law firm Morgan Lewis acquired its 14-storey building on Pennsylvania Avenue, the cellular offices were ranged around a 50 m deep shaft. Staff faced the prospect of spending their days staring out at a dark, concrete wall.
Then architect Carpenter Norris came up with a brilliant idea. The firm filled the cavity with a 35 m high glass cylinder, designed to redirect sunlight through the building’s internal windows. On the roof, a rotating computer-controlled 5 m2 mirror tracks the sun and redirects its beams via a second mirror down the glass tube, which refracts them into the offices.
At night, xenon light-cannons on the roof shoot artificial rays across the mirror. The light’s colours can be changed using filters – for Independence Day on 4 July, the theme was red, white and blue.
Steve Malinka, a partner in the firm, says: “The reaction to it has been fantastic. It’s become a signature of our firm and has created an esprit de corps – we’ve seen lower staff turnover.”
The pipe’s co-designer Davidson Norris says: “We are very proud of it; nothing like it has been done before.” At least not for 4000 years or so, since Egyptian builders made use of sequences of mirrors to bring sunlight into the pyramids.
No comments yet