Dutch Courage Delivers Offsite Benefits

8th December, 2022

Lightweight steel framing systems are a core approach within the offsite sector and as Voestalpine Metsec are proving, its varied shapes, sizes and profiles are playing a major part in a landmark new development in Amsterdam.

The demands to provide quality, affordable buildings, particularly in the residential sector, whilst delivering speed, efficiency, safety and sustainability are not exclusive to the UK construction industry. They are challenges faced by building professionals throughout the world – professionals who are adopting modern methods of construction (MMC) and digitalisation to help satisfy these demands.

Offsite construction techniques lend themselves perfectly to this drive towards productivity and environmental responsibility, with data-driven design contributing through enhancements in the flow of information from initial design concepts through to completion as well as the subsequent management and maintenance of the buildings. In the UK, lightweight steel framing systems have long been recognised as a key component when it comes to meeting these challenges in multi-storey construction projects.

They allow detailed solutions to be created well-ahead of construction, with all components designed to meet a project's requirements and manufacturing, delivery and installation schedules established with precision. Held in digital form, this information can then be fed into the construction process at the appropriate time.

Framing components are then manufactured to the precise needs of the project, coded for ease of assembly onsite and delivered ready for immediate installation in accordance with construction schedules.

In addition to its ability to deliver efficiency and precision throughout the building process, steel framing also contributes towards the sustainability credentials of a project, particularly when it comes to end-of-life. Whereas many other building materials are not readily recycled or repurposed at the end of their working life, steel has a re-use and recovery rate approaching 100%, making it one of the most recyclable materials on earth.

With governments working towards net zero carbon emissions manufacturers will need to up their game when it comes to environmental responsibility.

As part of voestalpine AG's Metal Forming Division, voestalpine Metsec is a signatory to the group's target of achieving net zero by 2035 and has already published an Environmental Product Declaration (EPD) covering its purlins and framing systems.

Verified by independent EPD authority, EPD Hub, the declaration provides designers, specifiers and developers with comprehensive information to include in a project's sustainability assessment. It includes a lifecycle assessment and environmental impact data, comprising core environmental impact indicators, use of natural resources and end of life information.

Amsterdam Valley

The advantages of lightweight steel framing systems over alternatives are clearly demonstrated in a major new development recently completed in the Netherlands. In a departure from the more common local habit of using timber, Dutch developers have used steel framing systems from UK-based voestalpine Metsec to provide infill for the varied shapes, sizes and profiles of a major new development in Amsterdam. Rising from the flat landscape of Amsterdam's Zuidas central business district is Amsterdam Valley, a striking 100m tall structure which presents an eye-catching jagged facade of stone terraces, bay windows and balconies, covered in dense greenery. More redolent of a three-peaked mountain than a building, Amsterdam Valley is an innovative and sustainable mixeduse development commissioned by EDGE Technologies and designed by architects, MVRDV.

Providing panoramic views over the iconic city of Amsterdam, the Valley's 75,000m2 of space accommodates 200 apartments, seven storeys of office space, a three-storey underground car park with space for 375 cars and 1,850 bicycles, and a variety of retail, leisure and cultural facilities, including bars, restaurants, gym, swimming pool and museum.

The project's bold design is matched by the courage of the construction consortium (Boele & Van Eesteren and G&S Bouw) in selecting voestalpine Metsec's lightweight steel framing system, rather than opting for the more usual Dutch solution of timber, to provide infill throughout the building. Appointed to design, supply and install the SFS, British specialists, MTJ Builders were involved at the early stages of the Amsterdam Valley project, working with the project's design and construction teams to develop a scheme which would accommodate the building's striking outline as well as deliver the performance and efficiency for which SFS is renowned.

Kulwinder Lall of MTJ Builders comments: "The contractors needed an infill system which would support the bracketry for the natural stone cladding panels which had pretty much been cut by the time we were consulted. SFS provided a versatile and adaptable solution which would also assure rapid progress when delivered to site. A full-sized working mock-up of one of the Valley's cells, using SFS as infill, convinced the development team of the system's efficacy. Working with voestalpine Metsec's design team, we produced designs and 3D models of the installation before manufacture, delivery and installation."

Produced to BIM standards, the SFS design was created to precisely match the architects' setting-out information, which determined the wall and opening locations. Each floor required between eighty and one hundred SFS panel section drawings, with the entire project requiring in excess of 5,000 drawings.

To assist with co-ordination between the 3D models and site a bespoke SFS track Revit family was created with additional offset nodes, facilitating a mainly digital collaborative environment, with some hard copy drawings produced to assist installation.

As a BIM project, the location of each specific stud needed to be exact, as other parties would be reliant on the SFS model for subsequent installation of their own products and systems. This required each stud to be dimensioned from a datum to allow the SFS installation teams to position each stud precisely in its designated location. Some 9,500m2 of voestalpine Metsec SFS was supplied to Amsterdam Valley, with a mixture of 90mm, 150mm, 240mm and 270mm stud sizes used according to requirements. Compared to timber or blockwork walls, SFS provides a lightweight solution which can be adapted onsite to accommodate any variances in the main steel or concrete structural frame, ensuring a seamless fit at each stud location which proved invaluable in coping with the Valley's many and varied angles.

Lall concludes: "With the untimely intervention of Coronavirus during the SFS installation phases, Amsterdam Valley posed a few challenges. "Fortunately, the digital environment created by voestalpine Metsec's design team assured close co-operation between ourselves, voestalpine Metsec and the contractors. The project went as smoothly as the pandemic would allow, with SFS proving its worth and justifying the Dutch development team's courage. The building's design was out of the ordinary and, for the Dutch construction industry, so was the SFS solution."

For more information visit: www.metsec.com

Read the full article, go to Light Steel Frame Magazine

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