European Spallation Supply / Buro Happold + Henning Larsen + Cobe
European Spallation Source / Buro Happold + Henning Larsen + Cobe
Text description provided by the architects. The international research facility ESS, housing the world’s most powerful neutron source, is located in Lund, Sweden, and will create a pioneering multi-disciplinary research environment. At ESS, neutrons generated through spallation will enable scientists to study materials on an atomic and molecular level. This will greatly benefit a variety of research fields such as life and environmental science, energy, materials, and archaeology.
The facility, designed by Henning Larsen and COBE architects, required a robust steel structure to cope with complex operational requirements and maximize flexibility during its use. Taking this into account, Buro Happold’s team of specialist engineers developed a unique structural design with large open spans to cover the Target building and associated Experimental Halls.
Due to the strict design criteria placed upon the building by the regulatory authorities, the Buro Happold team ensured the steel structure could meet stringent ‘worst-case’ design conditions. This included supporting up to 7m of snow over portions of the roof and the ability to withstand an earthquake more severe than any recorded in modern history in this area.
The cantilevering roof extending up to 35 meters beyond the perimeter of the building gives the facility a memorable visual identity, whilst still catering for extreme environmental loading. The cantilevered portions withstand dynamic wind conditions and snow, but also help counterbalance the deflections in the steelwork trusses over the adjacent Experimental Halls.
Four operating overhead cranes, supplied by Munck and Dematek, provide great operational flexibility to the building. The crane in the central target building meets particularly high safety standards as it is required to transport heavy components and sometimes activated material resulting from the spallation process: It can lift 115 tonnes – the weight of a Boeing 787. The building’s outer structure was designed to cope with internal forces and movement caused not only by individual cranes but also the many loading scenarios created when all cranes are in operation simultaneously.
The various operational loads from the crane, together with the complex environmental loads, resulted in more than two million possible combinations of loading scenarios. This additional design challenge necessitated a computational engineering approach. As commercially available software was incapable of this level of analysis, Buro Happold developed an in-house programme to assist the selection of the critical combinations and enable efficiency in the design process. This added yet another computational element to the support provided by the project team, complementing the façade panelisation study conducted with the façade engineering team and architects.
The cladding of the overhanging roof is clad in L-shaped aluminium lamellas mounted onto panels. The nature of these panels prevents detrimental snow accumulation on the overhang, reducing the total load acting on the large overhangs. With parametric modelling the optimum shape and layout of the panels was defined and the number of bespoke assemblies was reduced by 87%.
ESS is due to be in full operations by the end of 2027. Following the completion of the civil construction works, the facility will now continue to be prepared for research.