architecture update letter from china
2012-01-26 13:02
Shanghai Museum of Glass, by Logon Architects/Coordination Asia German practice Logon has been feted across the country for its design of the Shanghai Museum of Glass, launched last spring. The museum's unsung location, in an obscure northern reach of the city, and silly acronym (SHMOG) are mitigated by the lofty transformation of this former glass-making workshop, and the dazzling exhibition spaces planned by Tilman Thuermer of Coordination Asia. The 3,500sq m showcase displays delicate decorative works spanning a millennium, with emphasis on contemporary showstoppers and even futuristic applications for space travel. Over the coming months Logon will introduce a veritable village of workshops, in a tangle of defunct buildings behind the site www.coordination-asia.com www.logon-architecture.com
如果建筑物能说话,中国的声音将传遍全世界。从闪闪发光的文化大厅和跨国酒店到像Ordos这样的城市,在内蒙古,未来派的杰作从沙漠中像现代的凤凰一样升起,新建筑的数量是令人兴奋的。考虑一下像重庆、宁波和大连这样的地方,仅仅是十年前的小哨所——今天他们反对地图绘制者,他们可以在瞬间转换。显然,如果你对建筑有抱负的话,中国就是你要去的地方。像SoM和根斯勒这样的泰坦的到来是旧的新闻,甚至精品公司也在上海、北京甚至像杭州这样的二级前哨基地建立了一个商店。然而,这不仅仅是西方的入侵。许多中国最激动人心的当代建筑来自于新一代的本土建筑师,在国际上或在新兴的设计部门教授。美国主导的超级塔(有几十个)倾向于垄断注意力,但中国的新创意正在起步,建立急需的学校、图书馆和社区中心。他们共同拥有的是对可持续实践的热情,以及某种程度上驱使该国目前对大型开发商浪费大量、浪费性项目的兴趣。可以肯定的是,开发商正在吃掉大量土地,但在另一边,草会更绿。
Shanghai Museum of Glass, by Logon Architects/Coordination Asia
Shanghai Museum of Glass, by Logon Architects/Coordination Asia
Shanghai Museum of Glass, by Logon Architects/Coordination Asia
Shanghai Museum of Glass, by Logon Architects/Coordination Asia
Shanghai Museum of Glass, by Logon Architects/Coordination Asia
Liyuan Library, Huairou, by Li Xiaodong Atelier In Huairou, a village just outside Beijing, locals use fallen timber to fire their stoves for tea and hot broth. Here, architect Li Xiaodong has used the sticks for cladding, affixed to a glazed exterior frame. A nature trail leads from the heart of the village to this mountainous forest, where the library, completed in October, lures dedicated readers. Inside, bespoke shelving displays the collection like a modern city bookshop. Steps incorporate platforms for seating and a reading deck is inset with more shelving www.lixiaodong.net
Liyuan Library, Huairou, by Li Xiaodong Atelier
Liyuan Library, Huairou, by Li Xiaodong Atelier
Liyuan Library, Huairou, by Li Xiaodong Atelier
Himalayas Centre, Shanghai, by Arata Isozaki Pudong is possibly the best example of a Chinese city that's risen from virtually nothing. Two decades ago it was nigh on unpopulated; today it is a showcase of some of Asia's boldest architecture, a prime example of 'if you build it, they will come'. Japan's Arata Isozaki rolls out the welcome wagon with his Himalayas Center, completed in March, inspired by feng shui, Chinese characters and artist Mondrian's Neoplasticism movement. The result - anchored by an 'urban forest' at centre - is as complicated as it is magnificent www.isozaki.co.jp
Himalayas Centre, Shanghai, by Arata Isozaki
Himalayas Centre, Shanghai, by Arata Isozaki
Himalayas Centre, Shanghai, by Arata Isozaki
Sliced Porosity Block, Chengdu, by Steven Holl Steven Holl is bringing the panda city into the 21st century with his cluster of 'sun-sliced' towers in his trademark monochrome colour scheme (a nod to those pandas?). Linking the geothermally heated buildings are five stepped entranceways leading to a central elevated 'urban terrace' on the scale of Rockefeller Center's great public piazza. Three rainwater ponds dug out from the common are lined in translucent material so that they act as skylights to the retail plaza at ground level. The ponds are paired with pavilions designed by Holl himself as well as a collection of other designers www.stevenholl.com
Sliced Porosity Block, Chengdu, by Steven Holl
Zhujiajiao Museum of Humanities & Arts, by Scenic Architecture The historic canal towns around Shanghai are fast becoming destinations for starchitecture. IM Pei recently completed his multifaceted Suzhou Museum and, last spring, Scenic Architecture launched its granite-and-glass museum in Zhujiajiao, the formidably named canal town. The open atrium is overlooked by a mezzanine, off which sprout galleries, terraces and a pool that reflects two ancient ginkgo trees at the entry of the old town www.scenicarchitecture.com
Zhujiajiao Museum of Humanities & Arts, by Scenic Architecture
Zhujiajiao Museum of Humanities & Arts, by Scenic Architecture
Zhujiajiao Museum of Humanities & Arts, by Scenic Architecture
CITIC Towers, Shanghai, by Arquitectonica Twin concave stone-and-glass towers by Miami-based practice Arquitectonica are simple yet striking monuments to China's banking might (they're occupied by the Agricultural Bank of China and China Construction Bank). And yet the riverfront site, the former Shanghai Shipyard, informed the design, including the nautical symmetry and the negative space between the towers, which resemble a gateway. The original slipway is to be restored for use as a museum www.arquitectonica.com
CITIC Towers, Shanghai, by Arquitectonica
CITIC Towers, Shanghai, by Arquitectonica
CITIC Towers, Shanghai, by Arquitectonica
CITIC Towers, Shanghai, by Arquitectonica
Andaz Shanghai, by Kohn Pedersen Fox After a decade of sometimes ill-thought-out development across Shanghai, these low-rises in the smart Xintiandi district are doing right by the city. The shapely stone-clad structures, designed by multi-national practice Kohn Pedersen Fox (with offices in Shanghai and Hong Kong), provide a fantastical backdrop to the historic village that lies beyond, offering a new experience from every angle. The first to open, in early 2011, houses the luxury Langham hotel. Asia's first Andaz launched in the second building at the end of the year www.kpf.com Photograph: H.G. Esch
Andaz Shanghai, by Kohn Pedersen Fox
Andaz Shanghai, by Kohn Pedersen Fox
KK100, Shenzhen, by TFP Farrells In its spectacular transition from fishing village to economic zone of more than eight million, Shenzhen has displaced some of its old residents. But before breaking ground on the 3.6-hectare site that became the Kingkey complex, developers made villagers stakeholders in the project, offering packages that included new homes for everyone. Then, with a clear conscience, TFP Farrells built what locals call KK100, the tallest tower ever built by a British architect -- and the eighth tallest in the world. The 100-storey, 442m mixed-use building opened in autumn 2011, offering views to Hong Kong from the six-star hotel up top www.tfpfarrells.com
KK100, Shenzhen, by TFP Farrells
KK100, Shenzhen, by TFP Farrells
KK100, Shenzhen, by TFP Farrells
KK100, Shenzhen, by TFP Farrells
St Regis Tianjin, by SOM An homage to Rem Koolhas's CCTV Tower in Beijing? Doubtful, but the luxury Hai River-front hotel -- only 30 minutes by high-speed train from Beijing -- is no less striking. US practice SOM interprets the city's status as China's fifth largest -- and the 'gateway to the north' - with a hollowed cube in steel and glass, a few steps away from the high-speed rail station the practice plans to launch next year www.som.com
St Regis Tianjin, by SOM
St Regis Tianjin, by SOM
Taikang Terrace, Shanghai, by A00 Architecture Now that the architectural preservationists have got their act together, the challenge in Shanghai is development in marked historic zones. A00 Architecture has come up with a solution in the city's trendiest design enclave, a cluster of old lane houses repurposed as galleries and boutiques. Taikang Terrace, which opens officially in February, links a jumble of factories to the historic site with original brick, reclaimed wood and a series of communal terraces www.azerozero.com
Taikang Terrace, Shanghai, by A00 Architecture
Taikang Terrace, Shanghai, by A00 Architecture
Xiangfan City Museum by Antoine Predock Architects Xiangfan City Museum by Antoine Predock ArchitectsNothing by international practice Antoine Predock Architects, which uses light, landscape, stone and steel equally in its unconventional structures, can be summed up in a single word. Indeed the Xiangfan City Museum, a paean to the ancient city, leans toward the indescribable. The museum is like an athiest church, sprouting from the earth and reaching toward heaven with stainless-steel shafts resembling organ pipes. Escalators carry visitors through the space like an unravelling scroll -- to the soundtrack of falling water from the fountains below www.predock.com
Xiangfan City Museum by Antoine Predock Architects
Xiangfan City Museum by Antoine Predock Architects
keywords:architecture, modern architecture, China, Hangzhou, beijing, Shanghai, design, modern design
关键词:建筑,现代建筑,中国,杭州,北京,上海,设计,现代设计
如果建筑能说话,中国的建筑就会在世界各地被听到。从闪闪发光的文化殿堂和跨国酒店到内蒙古鄂尔多斯这样的城市,像现代凤凰一样从沙漠中崛起的未来派杰作,数量之多。
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