The new King Abdullah Petroleum Studies and Research Center (KAPSARC) is a tangible symbol of environmental innovation. Our proposal redefines the traditional campus into a three dimensional master plan of interconnected built form and planted landscapes that accommodate discrete zones of public and private program while also creating intersection and overlap between the two. Embedded in this sculpted environment, an iconic hybrid building emerges amidst a protected oasis of native desert flora and naturally cooling reflecting pools. Our strategy grows out of the same environmental forces that have shaped desert cultures and plant species in the region over the course of history.
Traditionally, walled oasis villages (such as the old city of Dir’iyah, the ancestral home of the Al-Sauds and the birthplace of the Saudi-Wahhabi union) have incubated the expansion of culture in the region. The new KAPSARC master plan is rooted in the historical model of the oasis village: pools of recycled water naturally cool the air and create a habitable climate; gardens of endangered desert plants surround and weave between the architecture; and the iconic research center building rises at the core of the site, with walls radiating out to offer both symbolic and literal protection. As if generated by the dynamism of the research nucleus, the security walls and glowing light bars emanate from the Center—building becomes wall, which in turn activates and organizes the site.
Parallel to cultural responses to the environment, which have yielded typologies like the walled oasis village, desert plants around the world have evolved optimal forms to thrive in extreme climates. For example, the cactus, a typical desert ecosystem plant native to the Americas, has developed a maximum volume with minimal surface area, to mitigate the plant’s exposure to the elements and protect its precious supply of water. Inspired by the cactus’s compact, efficient form, our proposal concentrates the public and research program areas into a single, hybrid building, to afford the Center and its users a space that offers both comfortable respite from the desert, and social, cultural, and intellectual intensity.