The Agbar tower is a 35-story and 142 m high “small skyscraper”, located in Plaza de las Glorias. It fits exactly in the acute angle formed by Diagonal Ave. and Badajoz St. The shape of the building emulates a fountain having a constant and perfectly stable pressure. This is a very suitable image for the headquarters of a water company, reinforced by the idea that the building does not lean on the ground floor of the plot but it emerges from a crater in whose bed there is a water sheet. Four basement floors fill the whole plot and include support functions and the parking. The auditorium, located in the first basement, appears in the surface as a hill in the undulating topography that makes up the open space planned around the tower.
The exterior cylinder is upright just to the 18th floor where its generators
start to curve to the interior, gradually diminishing their section up to the
26th floor where the concrete stops and the siding is completed with a metal
structure glass dome. This dome ends the building with its 142 m of height. The
last 6 floors, built with concrete post-tensioned noggins of several
thicknesses, are cantilevered from the central core, sharing the big space under
the dome. These floors will be used for management purposes. All the building is
wrapped in a second skin of laminated glass slats with different degrees of
transparency, blur the coloured façade behind, and behave as a vibrant veil
shrouding the tower. The slats are treated and tilt depending on their location
and a thorough study of the sun rays incidence.
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