HANNOVER MESSEGELANDE / HANOVER FAIRGROUND

1,179 views 17 slides May 10, 2021
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About This Presentation

hannover messegelande / Hanover Fairground
CASE STUDY
INTRODUCTION
HISTORY AND TIMELINE
SITE CONNECTIVITY
PLAN
CIRCULATION FOR SPECIALLY ABLED
ELECTRO MOBILE SERVICE STATIONS
PARKING DETAILS TO THE CENTER CIRCULATION
CENTER ALLOTMENT
EXHIBITION HALL 19/20 OF DEUTSCHE MESSE IN HANOVER
TRADE FAIR HAN...


Slide Content

Architecture design assignment hannover messegelande GROUP MEMBERS : JUHI JASEEM, A1904019079 MOHD. AFFAN, A1904019036

CASE STUDY – II

INTRODUCTION Location : Hanover, Germany. Architect : gmp · Architekten von Gerkan, Marg und Partner. Cooperation : Renk Horstmann Renk , Planungsgesellschaft Laatzen . Client : Deutsche Messe AG, Hannover. Scope of Work : conceptual design, construction design, site supervision. The Hanover Fairground ( Messegelände Hannover) is an exhibition area in the Mittelfeld district of Hanover, Germany. Featuring 496,000 m² (5.3 million sq.ft .) of covered indoor space, 58,000 m² (624,306 sq ft) of open-air space, 27 halls and pavilions and a convention centre with 35 function rooms, it is the largest exhibition ground in the world.

HISTORY AND TIMELINE The area of the fairground originally was an aircraft works. After World War II, the British military government in Allied-occupied Germany wanted to hold a trade fair and sought for a good place. 1947: Exportmesse held for the first time 1950: Exportmesse is renamed to Deutsche Industrie -Messe 1956-1958: Hermesturm erected. 1961: The Deutsche Industrie -Messe is renamed to Hannover Messe. 1970: Hall 1 is opened, then the largest exhibition hall in the world. It becomes permanent home to CeBIT, a subdivision of the Hanover Industry Fair. 1986: The CeBIT computer expo is held independently for the first time, after outgrowing the Industry Fair. 1990s: The fairground undergoes extensive remodeling in preparation for the Expo 2000. Hall 13 is constructed, at its time of completion the largest hall in the world without internal structural columns. 2000, June–October: The Expo 2000 world exhibition is held at the fairground and the surrounding areas. 2000: The Messehochhaus at the northern end of the area becomes the new home of the Deutsche Messe AG, the fairground's operator. It is a 20-floor highrise that stands at 110 m (360 ft) with antenna.

SITE CONNECTIVITY Airport: hannover airport 27.9 km Railway station: hannover hauptbahnhof 8.6 km Subway station: hannover messe / laatzen 1 km How to get to hanover fairground By rail S- bahn lines s4, s8 -> on station hannover messe / laatzen and walk 10 minutes to the venue. In addition there are intercity express and regional express trains to this station. By tram : rail lines r10 and r11 to hannover messe / laatzen Lines 8 and 18 to messe nord station Lines 6 and 16 to messe ost station By bus : use bus line 340 and 341 to gutenbergstraße stop (south messe area) or hannover messe / laatzen stop (west 1 messe area)

The fairground has been linked to the city's tramway network since 1949. The original terminus, called Messegelände , has been moved several times, and is now situated at the entrance Nord 2, between halls 1 and 18. Railway station is 500 metres west of the fairground on the hanoverian southern railway and the hanover – würzburg high-speed railway. It is linked by the skywalk, a people mover that works like a horizontal escalator. Route control systems on the A2, A7 and A37. Variable signage systems in front of the motorway junction. Traffic control system on the messeschnellweg ( msw ). The parking guidance system on the messering and additional mobile led boards in the exhibition area.

PLAN 7 total entries provided on all sides. 28,000 car parking provided. Strategic location in europe , at a major crossroads in northern germany , gives a decisive competitive edge.

CIRCULATION FOR SPECIALLY ABLED

ELECTRO MOBILE SERVICE STATIONS

PARKING DETAILS TO THE CENTER CIRCULATION

CENTER ALLOTMENT

EXHIBITION HALL 19/20 OF DEUTSCHE MESSE IN HANOVER construction, which consists of six modules and measures 225m in length, 85m in width and 19m in height, not only provides a total floor area of more than 25,700m2. The new complex is far more than just an exhibition venue. It can be used for events with up to 14,600 persons as well as for conferences, conventions and catering. The exhibition hall is free from any vertical supports and, with a clear height of 12.5m, provides approx. 14,300m2 of exhibition space. The hall consists in its room-high separating wall, which can be used to separate the space into two events areas, one with approx. 10,940m2 and the other with 3,370m2. In addition, there are four further conference rooms of between 40m2 and 90m2 arranged along the north and south façades, hence benefitting from daylight. Three of these rooms can also be divided.

TRADE FAIR HANNOVER HALL 8/9 Length : 345 m. Height : 34.7 m. Exhibition area : 21,000 m². Width : 245 m. Volume hall 8 : 100 m x 120 m x 8.7 m. Volume hall 9 :137 m x 240 m x 26 m. Base area : 32,800 m². Adjacent area : 4,000 m². Hall 9 is fully glazed hall with primary girders 138 m in length each, designed as self-anchored suspension bridges, with suspension cables, hangers, masts and struts. It covers 32,800 m² of exhibition space - to date the world’s largest roof of a trade fair hall. Five main girders spanning from east to west with a ridge height of 26 m and a distance of 45 m structure the hall along its entire north-south length of 238 m. The roof area is made of 1,400 wooden cross-sections

ELEVATION HALL 8/9

A giant wooden structural “umbrella” roof that protects a central piazza consisting of a stage area for musicians and artists, small reconfigurable pavilions and restaurants, and spectators taking time out between events. Mimicking a forest, this giant roof’s columns represent the vertical structure of tree trunks while the lattice shells represent the tree canopy that allows daylight to penetrate below. This artificial forest of trees and buildings, in which private and public spaces, organic and non-organic forms are integrated. Covers more than 172,000 square feet (16,000 square meters), with four individual pavilions ranging in size from 10,000 t0 15,000 sq. Ft. (975 to 1,430 square meters). Each pavilion contains a small gallery as well as corresponding service areas so that each building can be used separately. (For additional resources, scroll to bottom.). PAVILION

INFERENCES Flexible structures. Green spaces and open pavilion. Connectivity and circulation. Parking abundance. Economic services for global business. Innovative supply solutions and lightweight construction (Industrial Supply). Integrated automation, industrial IT, drive technology and fluid technology (IAMD). Integrated energy systems and mobility (Energy). Integrated processes and IT solutions (Digital Factory). Offers for industrial startups (Young Tech Enterprise). Research and development (Research & Technology).

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