Aviva Stadium – the use of parametric modelling in structural design

Author: Paul Shepherd

Date published

2 February 2011

Price

Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The Institution of Structural Engineers The Institution of Structural Engineers
Back to Previous

Aviva Stadium – the use of parametric modelling in structural design

Tag
Author
Paul Shepherd
Date published
2 February 2011
Price

Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The Structural Engineer
Author

Paul Shepherd

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 89, Issue 3, 2011, Page(s) 26-34

Date published

2 February 2011

Author

Paul Shepherd

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 89, Issue 3, 2011, Page(s) 26-34

Price

Standard: £9.95 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

Paul Shepherd describes the use of parametric modelling for the 51 700 seat Aviva Stadium in Dublin, Ireland.

Synopsis

The new 51,700 seat Aviva Stadium build at Lansdowne Road and completed in early 2010 provides a world class sporting facility for the city of Dublin, Ireland. Due to the nature of the site and its surroundings a responsive architectural form was required which could be manipulated to optimise the design for a wide variety of design variables and constraints by accommodating these design changes quickly and easily. This naturally led project architects, Populous, to adopt a parametric approach to generate the form of the building envelope, whereby CAD models were defined using rules and relationships between objects rather than absolute coordinates in space.

This architectural parametric model was then passed directly to the structural engineers, Buro Happold, which extended it to include the geometry of the structural members. This paper adds to the body of scientific knowledge by documenting the details of the parametric model created by the author for the structural engineers, including not only the generation of geometry, which incorporates design constraints and embraces structural engineering logic, but is also linked to structural analysis software to provide rapid feedback on the effects of design decisions on structural performance.

Furthermore, since this is the first example of a project being designed and built using a single parametric model from architectural design right through to structural analysis, the advantages and challenges of adopting such an approach are discussed. Suggestions are made, based on the lessons learned, to assist those using parametric methods on live projects in the future.

Additional information

Format:
PDF
Pages:
26-34
Publisher:
The Institution of Structural Engineers

Tags

Stadium Parametric Project Focus Issue 3

Related Resources & Events

The Structural Engineer
<h4>Regeneration of Newton and Arkwright buildings at Nottingham Trent University</h4>

Regeneration of Newton and Arkwright buildings at Nottingham Trent University

Stephen Fernandez from Arup describes a renovation project in Nottingham, that involves the refurbishment of Grade II* listed buildings and the construction of new linking structures, a project that won a Institution regional structural award, making the shortlist for the national Structural Awards 2010.

Date – 2 February 2011
Author – Stephen Fernandez
Price – £9.95
The Structural Engineer
<h4>The Hornet's Nest pavilion - learning the challenges of full-scale construction from a digital model</h4>

The Hornet's Nest pavilion - learning the challenges of full-scale construction from a digital model

In 2018, BuroHappold Engineering and Studio X of the Hochschule Anhalt Graduate School of Architecture in Dessau, Germany, collaborated on the design and construction of the Hornet's Nest, a parametrically designed, temporary, timber pavilion assembled without the use of mechanical connections.

Date – 3 March 2020
Author – Alejandro Niklison, Sabine Mueller and Florian Foerster
Price – £9.95
The Structural Engineer
<h4>Digitally designed – Qatar Faculty of Islamic Studies</h4>

Digitally designed – Qatar Faculty of Islamic Studies

This paper describes the digital parametric design and fabrication optimisation used on the Qatar Faculty of Islamic Studies building in Doha, Qatar.

Date – 1 March 2016
Author – Ben Lewis
Price – £9.95