Undisturbed marble shine- thanks to invisible fastenings

Fischer Special Anchor, strong Zurich commercial building facade

Undisturbed marble shine- thanks to invisible fastenings
The store in Zurich, especially on the noble Bahnhofstrasse, is an important location for the Lucerne-based Bucherer Group. As the world’s largest luxury watch and jewellery retailer with 36 locations in Europe and 32 stores in the USA, the owners made an exclamation mark when renovating the business building in a premium location. 
Image: Natursteine Wüst AG

Property description

Architect
Office Haratori from Zurich and Office Winhov from Amsterdam
Facade
Consisting of 100 different steel tube grid constructions
Type of object
Business premises of the luxury watch and jewellery retailer “Bucherer”
The Zurich-based architectural firm Office Haratori and the architects from Office Winhov in Amsterdam were responsible for the design. The planners were also able to express the client’s field of activity in the architecture. The renovation of the building and the newly constructed marble facade in 2017/2018 integrate the commercial building into its surroundings. In addition, the renovated commercial building also represents consistency, timelessness, innovation and perfection, the “core business of the Bucherer company”, according to the architects. While the ground floor is all about the material bronze, the carefully arranged marble plates characterise the floors above it. The stone comes from Switzerland’s only marble quarry in the canton of Ticino. “We refine the marble from Vallemaggia into precisely crafted, jewellery-like elements,” says the Haratori office about the design. "The facade becomes – similar to a sunclock – an image of the current times of day and year. The marble relief is in the changing shadow pattern, sometimes soft over the entire surface, then sharp and orderly."
Image: Natursteine Wüst AG
The facade, which now creates different moods depending on the incidence of light, meant a lot of work for the construction engineers of blesshess AG from Lucerne. The building envelope also posed a challenge for those involved in planning and implementation. For example, Prof. Dr. Alfred Stein, the engineering office for fastening technology IBT GmbH (Thür) and Medzech Ingenieure GmbH (Bad Homburg) were heavily involved in the facade dimensioning and planning. Luchsinger & Partner GmbH (Quarten, Switzerland) and Natursteine Wüst AG (Wallisellen, Switzerland) also planned and implemented the professional prefabrication and installation of the facade. 
Image: Luchsinger and Partner GmbH
The facade consists of approx. 100 different steel tubular lattice structures, fitted with conical marble pieces of 6 to 18 cm thickness in various sizes. These components have been prefabricated into elements at the factory. Later, they were hung on site in blind assembly on 6 to 8 pins. The individual weight was up to 4.5 tonnes. Placing such heavy elements with an off-centre centre of gravity so accurately that all pins were hit was a major challenge. Especially because the steel elements were not flat, but deformed by up to 10 mm, which is inevitable in steel construction. This hurdle could only be overcome with a suspension device designed specifically for these elements. The fischer facade systems division of the company group was responsible for fastening the marble panels to the steel structure using undercut technology. The undercut holes were drilled with a tolerance of less than 1 mm. This meant a great deal of effort, as Steven-Henrik Maier, Market Manager of Fischer Fassadensysteme, reports. "Challenges arose with regard to the high loads incurred due to the dead weight of the panels, which were up to 180 mm thick. A few pull-out tests were necessary to prepare for the correct and safe execution." The tests were carried out in different panel thicknesses (30, 40, 60, 80 mm), also close to the edge and with larger panel formats. As a result, a special anchor with a higher integration depth was designed to be able to carry the loads.
Image: Luchsinger and Partner GmbH
Challenges arose with regard to the high loads incurred due to the dead weight of the panels up to 180 mm thick. A few pull-out attempts were necessary to prepare for the correct and safe execution.
Steven-Henrik Maier, Market Manager for Fischer Fassadensysteme

The fischer solution convinced the planners and engineers in several respects. From an aesthetic point of view, the possibility of fixing the panels invisibly was decisive. In addition, this was the only way to create the desired 2 mm joints in the centre of the element. In addition, there was the high load-bearing capacity, the technical support and the willingness to find and produce a solution tailored individually to the project. This consisted of Fischer FZP II cyclone plate anchors in the special version 13 x 25.5 M8/18 carbon, which were installed in a quantity of approx. 10,000 units.

For the result, the architects of Haratori, freely according to Le Corbusier, find the right words and describe it as “artful, correct and great play of the surfaces gathered under the light”.

 

Image: Luchsinger and Partner GmbH
cd-blue-54ff7c8c74-kqf88