The Northern Exposure seminar is the highlight of the summer for anyone who wants to keep up to date with the latest trends and technologies in high-rise construction. We've invited some of the industry's absolute best to Helsinki to share their experiences and answer the burning questions of High-Rise construction.
The keynote speakers in our programme are Christoph Timm, Principal Designer at SOM New York, and James O'Callaghan, Founding Partner of Eckersley O'Callaghan. SOM is known to have designed more than half of the world's tall buildings. Eckersley O'Callaghan, for example, has been responsible for the structural design of Apple's Steve Jobs Theatre and many of Apple's stores worldwide.
In addition to the above, we have invited Steve Selkowitz from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. His knowledge of the glass industry, carbon emissions and energy efficiency are based on decades of research at the lab. He has outlined and explored some of the emerging design solutions in use today, and the RD&D trends that will drive and/or constrain optimal design solutions in the decade ahead.
Cooperation with the GPD conference
We are organising the High Rise -Northern Exposure seminar in collaboration with the Glass Innovation Institute and the Finnish Flat Glass Association, registration: https://www.gii.fi/
Event in Helsinki on June 13, just a day before the GPD conference starting in Tampere (https://gpd.fi/).
The Helsinki seminar is a unique opportunity to get the latest information on tall buildings and the challenges they face in different countries and climates.
Learning about tall buildings in northern conditions
The high-level seminar will feature presentations from top experts in architecture and construction. This year, the content has been specifically focused on tall building in northern conditions.
"We will focus on issues that architects, structural engineers and builders in Finland will face. During the day, everyone will have the opportunity to learn something new about the construction of the future, as more and more very tall buildings will be built in Finland in the future," says Christoph Timm, SOM New York's chief designer.
"We are now offering a unique opportunity to learn from what others have done and how they have done it. We will show how problems are solved from different perspectives and present case studies from Sweden, Europe and different continents. Our aim is to summarise and make the possibilities and technologies of design as concrete as possible for Finnish designers and builders."