Walvis Bay Container Terminal — elevations and section
Built Work · First commission

Container Terminal Entrance

Walvis Bay Harbour, Namibia  ·  1997
Location
Walvis Bay Harbour, Namibia
Programme
Harbour entrance gate — reception, security, vehicle processing
Year
1997
With
Bob Mould Architects, Walvis Bay
Structure
Elliptical concrete roof · 43m span · Precast concrete kerbing
Plan geometry
Four intersecting ellipses · 43 488mm × 35 100mm overall

An ellipse at the harbour entrance

The Container Terminal Entrance at Walvis Bay Harbour was Booyens's first built project, produced while working with Bob Mould Architects in Namibia in 1997. The brief was functional — a gate complex handling the entrance and exit of container traffic, abnormal loads, and pedestrians — but the building that resulted from it is anything but ordinary.

The plan is derived from four intersecting ellipses, generating a perimeter wall that curves continuously around the entire structure. The overall footprint is 43 488mm long by 35 100mm wide. A sweeping concrete roof follows the geometry of the ellipses, rising and falling over the entrance lanes, reception, deliveries, and the abnormal load exit — its profile determined entirely by the functional programme below it.

The section drawings show the ambition clearly: a 9 562mm rise across the main span, the concrete roof supported by a 2×50mm dual 316 stainless steel rod with long bends at each end, fixed to the ring beam without a single straight line in the entire structure. The precast concrete kerbstone and surface bed complete the civic character of the entrance.

Built at 27 years old, in a first job, in Namibia: the structure already contains everything that would define the next three decades of practice. Form derived from geometry and programme. Structure made visible. No concession to decoration.

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