An existing little hillock made it possible to enter the new building on two levels.

An existing little hillock made it possible to enter the new building on two levels.

The new building for the Norwegian Meteorological Institute contains two main functions: Staff meeting rooms and canteen on the upper level, with direct entrance from the little hillock, and the servers for processing climatic data below.

The new building strikes up a relationship with the existing brick structure.

Tower above the staff canteen.

The perforated aluminium cladding has a pattern of clouds, shifting according to the security requirements of the areas inside.

Corridor.

The breaks in the ceiling reflect the shifts in the building volume.

Timber is used wherever possible in the interior. Secondary spaces are clad in painted spruce.

View from the institute‘s existing building.

Site plan.

Ground floor plan.

First floor plan.

Section.

Model of typical section through external wall. The new building achieves passive energy standard.



The new building houses the Meteorological Institute’s enormous servers for weather data processing, as well as new meeting rooms and a staff canteen. Public- and staff areas are located on the upper level, with the technical functions below. The local terrain has been shaped to allow universal access to both levels, on both sides.
The external cladding of perforated panels varies from closed to open in a pattern of clouds circling the building. A low carbon footprint has directed the choice of main materials: timber cladding and low-carbon concrete.