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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

T-HAM PABP Factory in Taiwan by WZWX Architecture Group

 
July 30th, 2019 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: WZWX Architecture Group

Located in the Pingtung Agricultural and Bio-technology Park (PABP) in southern Taiwan, the T-Ham PABP factory is the largest and the most advanced pork meat processing factory in the country. This LEED gold certified factory complex contains a main factory building (22,000 m²), a diner and gift shop building (650 m²), and a waste water treatment building. The factory’s expansive product range covers more than 250 items, ranging from Western style hams, sausages and bacon, to artisanal wood smoked hand-tied hams, to Chinese style stewed, boiled and roasted meats, ready-to-eat meals, as well as vari-ous meat ingredients for chain restaurants and bakeries.

The client T-HAM is the oldest and the largest meat processing brand in Taiwan with over 50 years of history. The design of this new factory has been assigned with four principal goals. Firstly, it is to double the company’s production capacity in order to meet increasing demand from the domestic market. Sec-ondly, to upgrade the production facility in order to meet the export requirements of Japan, Singapore and the United States as it prepares for market expansion in 2020. Thirdly, it is to deliver a statement of the company’s corporate values which are high quality products, sustainable development, and environmental friendliness. Fourthly, it is to upgrade the working environment of their factory workers and their daily working experience – as “happy employees make better products”.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

  • Architects: WZWX Architecture Group
  • Project: T-HAM PABP Factory
  • Location: No. 28, Shen-Nong East Rd, Pingtung Agricultural and Bio-technology Park, Pingtung
  • Photography: Fernando Guerra
  • Clients: Taiwan Farm Industry Co., Ltd
  • Lead Architects: Richard Wang, Phil Kwong
  • Design Team: Wenwei Cheng, Karen Hsieh, Kenny Huang
  • Area: 24000.0 m2
  • Project Year: 2019

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The conventional meat processing factory building in Taiwan is essentially an enclosed refrigerated shed for storage and production. For this project, the design team pursued a spatial solution that is neither a shed, nor a fridge-like box, in order to distinguish ourselves from other brands. We wanted to incorporate as much daylight and views of the outside as possible into the building to improve the users’ experience.

The factory’s various so called ancillary functions were identified and organised to the “front” of the building behind a curtain wall facade in order to provide plenty natural light and views for these human activities. Ancillary functions include offices for admin, R&D, quality control, a seasoning laboratory, as well as staff canteens, changing rooms and toilets. Office staff and more importantly factory workers receive plenty of sunlight and views of surrounding plains when they use the canteens on their breaks and during their visits to the lavatories by passing the light filled corridors.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Storage and production functions were organized to the “rear” of the factory, with highly insulated walls to help maintain internal temperatures. Most production zones are refrigerated spaces with temperatures ranging from -35 degrees to 13 degrees.

The outer skin of the factory were clad in rough textured clay tiles, a typical Taiwanese cladding material, which was chosen to effectively protect the building from the region’s harsh southern sun and torrential rains in the rainy season.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The dark purplish-brown tiles have rough textures which mimic the fertile agricultural lands of this south-ern county. A touch of finesse and detail has been introduced by patterning the textures to give the skin a woven quality much like the premium hand-tied hams.

The walls on the south and north façade were slightly tilted in alternating angles so that the shadows on the walls form delicate patterns that vary as the day changes.

In order to meet the strict hygiene standards for meat export purposes to major markets such as Japan and Singapore, all flows of people, goods, air and liquids in the factory had to be strictly separated be-tween the production areas of raw meat and cooked meat.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The separation of circulation started at the factory entrance. Staff working in the raw and cooked meat sections enters from different entrances. Circular skylights on the roof of the entrance tunnel give the staff glimpses of daylight as they enter and exit the factory. Within, circulation routes, changing rooms, and canteens have all been colour coded according to raw product and cooked product zones in order to prevent any cross contamination.

On the rooftop, seven elevator shafts required for the production rise prominently into the sky. Their indi-vidual heights were dictated by their functions, but their forms were given sculptural expression – refer-encing the rocky central mountain ranges of Taiwan visible in the far distance. These rooftop forms – an abstract mountainous landscape – give the factory a distinct and sturdy identity. Open spaces on the rooftop provide ample space necessary to clean factory equipments, for special events and for staff to take their breaks.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Three main design factors contributed to the gold rating in LEED. Firstly, Carbon emission was minimized by using a high proportion of locally made and recycled materials, such as tiles, concrete and glass. Secondly, energy savings came from efficient MEP and HVAC design which saved about 20% of electricity. Thirdly, water efficiency was improved by selecting efficient fixtures and appliances which saved about a third of the normal levels. A rain water capture and reuse system was implemented to provide water for toilets, irrigation and car washes. The planting of local species of vegetation also contributed as they do not need extra irrigation once they passed the one year nursery period.

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

Image Courtesy © Fernando Guerra

The new factory design has been well received by the client. According to the factory manager, the new facility design greatly improved the overall production efficiency. It has also raised the morale and pride in the work force. The introduction of views and daylight into the workers’ office and social areas has made the factory workers’ daily experience much more pleasant. This has been translated into better motivation and improved product quality. The new facility has not only doubled the retention rate of existing workers, it has also made hiring new factory workers a much easier task.

When a foot and mouth disease outbreak took place in Taiwan in the late 1990s, a twenty year embargo on Taiwanese pork export followed. Next year, in 2020, there is a good chance that the embargo would be lifted, allowing Taiwanese pork to be exported again. This new factory has now strategically placed T-HAM ahead of its competitors, as the only meat factory in Taiwan that meets the highest export stand-ards.

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

Image Courtesy © WZWX Architecture Group

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Categories: Building, Building Campus, complex, Factory




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