Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Manhattan-based firm SHoP Architects has sent us a movie and more images illustrating its masterplan for Konza Techno City, a new “silicon” city 40 miles from Kenya’s capital Nairobi (+ movie).

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: entry plaza

Work is already underway on the pavilion that forms part of the first phase of SHoP Architects’ masterplan for Konza Techno City, a business and technology hub that’s been dubbed Kenya’s “silicon savannah”.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: university campus

The $14.5 billion project will transform an area of grassland into a city of 250,000 residents. The city is expected to generate up to 200,000 jobs by the time its final phase is completed in 2030.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: business district

The first phase, to be built over five years, will house 30,000 residents and be shaped like a row of “stitches” in the overall masterplan, the architects told Dezeen.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: technology and life sciences district

The east-west axis of the first phase includes a boulevard of green spaces with bridges over the wide motorway leading to Nairobi.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: Konza Techno City pavilion

The four initial north-south axes will comprise, from west to east, a university, a residential area, a technology and life sciences district and a business district.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: Konza Techno City pavilion entrance

The stitch pattern is designed as a framework for the later growth of the city, which will be made up of criss-crossing horizontal and vertical bands.

Above: Konza Techno City pavilion entrance

The areas between the bands are expected to grow organically without specific planning.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: masterplan structure

SHoP Architects took over the masterplan after the Kenyan government rejected an earlier proposal by UK-based firm Pell Frischmann, some images from which we included in the launch of Konza Techno City last week.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: phase one

SHoP Architects is the firm behind the Atlantic Yards development in Brooklyn, New York, which includes a 32-storey residential tower set to be the world’s tallest modular building and the Barclays Center, a 19,000-seat indoor sports arena that opened last year.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: green spaces in phase one – click above for larger image

Other masterplans we’ve reported on recently include the redevelopment of Darling Harbour in Sydney by architecture firms OMA, Hassell and Populous and a plan to redesign Futian District in Shenzhen, China, as a “garden city”.

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: phase one programme – click above for larger image

See all masterplans »
See all architecture by SHoP Architects »

Konza Techno City masterplan by SHoP Architects

Above: Konza Techno City pavilion model

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Kenyan silicon city under construction

Kenya starts construction of Konza Technology City

News: the Kenyan government has commenced work on Konza Technology City, a £9.1 billion IT and business hub dubbed “Africa’s Silicon Savannah”.

Located almost 40 miles south-east of the capital Nairobi, Konza Technology City is expected to create more than 20,000 IT jobs by 2015, and around 200,000 jobs by the time it’s completed in 2030.

The 2011-hectare site will have a residential area comprising around 37,000 homes to accommodate 185,000 people.

Over 600 hectares of Konza will be marked off as green corridors, and Kenya Wildlife Conservancy has pledged to safeguard the ecology of the surrounding savannah.

Kenya starts construction of Konza Technology City

Above: plan for Konza Technology City
Top image: visual concept for Konza 

“It is expected to spur massive trade and investment as well as create thousands of employment opportunities for young Kenyans,” said Kenya’s president Mwai Kibaki at the groundbreaking ceremony.

The project, which is part of the government’s Vision 2030 initiative to improve the Kenya’s infrastructure, is also set to include a university campus, hotels, schools, hospitals and research facilities.

Kenya starts construction of Konza Technology City

Above: the site for Konza

We recently reported on a high-density, car-free city for 80,000 people being built from scratch in rural China, while a South Korean firm has developed a system of concrete modules for building the country’s answer to California’s Silicon Valley.

Other major masterplans around the world we’ve featured include a new district to double the size of Moscow and the redesign of the huge Futian District of Shenzhen, China.

See all news about masterplans »
See all projects from Africa »

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OMA, Hassell and Populous to redevelop Sydney’s Darling Harbour

News: a team made up of architecture firms OMA, Hassell and Populous has been selected to redevelop Sydney’s convention, exhibition and entertainment precinct at Darling Harbour (+ slideshow).

Darling Harbour, Sydney, by OMA, Populous and Hassell

Above: International Convention Centre

The Destination Sydney team, lead by developers Lend Lease, were today announced as the winning bidders with their plans to create a 40,000-square-metre exhibition centre, a red-carpet entertainment venue, a 900-room hotel and a new residential neighbourhood.

Dutch architects OMA will work alongside Hassell of Sydney and international firm Populous to deliver the 20-hectare masterplan, adding the new leisure complex to the north of Pier Street and new residential neighbourhood The Haymarket on the site of the existing Sydney Entertainment Centre and car park.

Darling Harbour, Sydney, by OMA, Populous and Hassell

Above: the theatre

“This project will redefine Sydney as a global city and create one of the world’s great meeting and entertainment destinations,” commented Destination Sydney’s chief executive Malcolm Macintyre. “Not only will it become a beacon for international visitors for conventions and events but will also build on the appeal of the Darling Harbour area for Sydney-siders creating an entertainment hub that promises to reconnect and re-energise the city.”

A phased redevelopment will see the existing Sydney Convention & Exhibition Centre close in December 2013, while the current Sydney Entertainment Centre will remain open until December 2015. Construction is set to complete in late 2016.

Darling Harbour, Sydney, by OMA, Populous and Hassell

Above: The Haymarket neighbourhood

Darling Harbour sit adjacent to Sydney’s city centre and has established itself as a centre for entertainment on the western edge of the central business district. Other recent developments in the area include an office complex that was awarded at the World Architecture Festival.

OMA have completed a number of projects over the last year, including the China Central Television Headquarters in Beijing and the headquarters of the Rothschild Bank in London.

See all our stories about OMA »

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Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects has designed a swirling complex of apartments, offices and leisure facilities on the abandoned site of an old textile factory in Belgrade, Serbia (+ slideshow).

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

Covering an area of around 94,000 square metres, the Beko complex will give the historic Dorcol quarter a new destination on a site that is just 500 metres from the city centre but is currently unused and inaccessible.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

The proposed cluster of building will also accommodate a five-star hotel, a congress centre, galleries and shops, as well as underground parking facilities for visitors and residents.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects took influence from the twentieth century Modernist architecture that is typical in the capital and combined it with the studio’s signature Parametric style to design a cluster of buildings that will appear to flow into one another.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

“The masterplan follows the region’s strong Modernist traditions and has applied new concepts and methods that examine and organize the programs of the site; defining a composition of buildings with the elegance of coherence that addresses the complexity of twenty-first century living patterns,” said Zaha Hadid.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

The curved walls of the buildings will fold around a series of new squares and gardens. ”The design for Beko is embedded within the surrounding landscape of Belgrade’s cultural axis and incorporates essential public spaces,” said Hadid.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

“It is absolutely critical to invest in these public spaces that engage with the city. They are a vital component of a rich urban life and cityscape, uniting the city and tying the urban fabric together,” she added.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

Above: the existing site 

The complex will be delivered as part of a £168 million regeneration project that includes a new waterfront public space by Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto, as well as a new bridge across the Sava river.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

Above: the existing site 

The architects will present the detailed proposals at the 2013 Belgrade Design Week, which takes place in June.

Beko Masterplan by Zaha Hadid Architects

Above: the existing site 

Zaha Hadid Architects has also just been selected to design a new national stadium for Japan and completed an art gallery at Michigan State University.

See all our stories about Zaha Hadid Architects »

Here’s some more information from the Belgrade Design Week Organisers:


Zaha Hadid regenerates Belgrade’s key historic site

The new contemporary development at the location of the former Beko textile factory, designed by Zaha Hadid, will mark the continuance of Belgrade’s signature “Modernist” movement, which was abruptly discontinued in the 1980s. The new multifunctional complex near Kalemegdan will awaken Belgrade’s spirit of modernism – the iconic style of the Serbian capital in the thirties, fifties and seventies.

Each of these decades was marked by key buildings which are, to this day, the landmarks of Belgrade and the region: The iconic Albania Palace and Radio Belgrade in the Thirties, the entire New Belgrade development with its crown jewel – the Palace of Serbia in the Fifties, Sava Center and the “25th of May” Sports Center in the Seventies… However, the development of such an progressive spirit was brutally cut short with the crisis after the death of Tito in the Eighties and the disintegration of Yugoslavia and the ensuing economic sanctions in the Nineties.

Belgrade went through a difficult struggle in the first decade of the XXI century trying to find its lost path, and now, with joint efforts of private and public investors, in the ‘10’s of the new millennium, the city finally caught an exiting momentum with first designs which are worthy successors of the famous modernist past, such as the “Ada” Bridge, the Port of Sava “Cloud”, the new “BEKO”, the “Center for the Promotion of Science”, Zira, Falkensteiner and Square Nine Hotels, the “Museum of Science and Technology” and the new urban plan for the Port of Belgrade, the “West 57” development… With the new world quality contests, designs and built environment, Belgrade saw also the return of leading global architects such Daniel Libeskind, Boris Podrecca, Wolfgang Tschapeller, Isay Weinfeld, Sou Fujimoto and last but not least Zaha Hadid. The engagement of Santiago Calatrava for a new Belgrade Philharmonic is also announced.

Regardless of opinions about the commission of “starchitects”, Belgrade will become the first city in the South East European region to have a building designed by the arguably world’s most successful architecture studio at the moment: Zaha Hadid Architects from London, UK. A unique multifunctional complex at the location of the former Beko factory at the Danube riverside, jointly with the proposed “Cloud” by the Japanese architect Sou Fujimoto on the adjoining Sava waterfront, will mark the revitalization of an entire area key to Belgrade’s development and history – the Confluence waterfront crescent from Small Kalemegdan to Beton Hala.

Poised to become the city’s new and happening center, the BEKO complex will cover the area of 94,000 square meters and include cutting edge residential spaces, galleries, offices, a five-star hotel, a (much needed for Belgrade) state-of-art congress center, retail spaces and a department store… The residential part will consist of top-quality finishes and building systems and the complex will also include a huge underground parking lot, maintenance service and security. The project is designed as a complex which offers a complete variety of services to the users who live or work there, to hotel guests and visitors. The immediate vicinity to the confluence riverside, with the pedestrian connection to the “Cloud”, will contribute to never before seen residential conditions in Belgrade, almost comparable to seaside marinas. In fact, this currently abandoned part of the city, will infuse a completely new life to the historical quarter of Dorcol – daily visitors, residents and tenants will be able to walk from the modern complex by a new planned bridge to Novak Djokovic’s adjacent tennis club and all the other recreational contents of the 25th May Sports Centre and then continue the pedestrians and bicycle paths to the restaurants and bars in the Beton Hala and Savamala area.

The Greek company Lamda Development bought the BEKO factory building and the plot in 2007, for EUR 55.8 million at a public auction.

Having in mind the complexity of the project, the new innovative materials and cutting edge systems which will be used during the construction, the total investment is expected to exceed EUR 200 million. From the beginning of the project planning to the realization of the project more than 2000 people will be involved, while the complex will permanently create about 1000 new jobs from all sorts of professions.

This complex will certainly set new standards in the Serbian and SEE market primarily living standards, but also in the field of architecture and construction. Considering several solutions by invited leading global architectural bureau, Lamda development finally chose the proposal by Zaha Hadid Architects. Thanks to the experience in constructing modern buildings in the vicinity of historic buildings and pushing the boundaries of architecture and urban planning, Zaha Hadid’s projects have become recognized all over the world. The main idea of the Zaha Hadid’s signature style, Parametricism, is introducing fluid forms into architecture, the forms and shapes existing in nature, in the flora and fauna. The buildings designed by Zaha Hadid transcend construction stereotypes: there are no rigid forms, no straight lines, no symmetry, no repetition, no standard function-based divisions of space. The buildings look different from every angle, the forms are round and fluid and the space is not segmented, it flows seamlessly from one room to another.

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Futian District masterplan by SWA Group

International firm SWA Group has been selected to redesign Futian District in Shenzhen, an area that’s larger than Manhattan (+ slideshow).

Futian District masterplan by SWA Group

Above: raised walkways and gardens are proposed for Futian District

Landscape architecture and urban planning firm SWA Group hopes to transform the congested and car-dominated district of central Shenzhen into a calmer, greener space where pedestrians are welcome.

Futian District masterplan by SWA Group

As part of SWA’s masterplan, titled Garden City of Tomorrow, residential streets will be made over with exercise areas for all age groups as well as quieter green spaces.

Futian District masterplan by SWA Group

Office streets will incorporate gardens with seating areas, while retail streets will encourage pedestrian traffic with public art and better lighting.

Futian District masterplan by SWA Group

A botanical garden in the shape of a circuit board, representing Shenzhen’s electronics industry, has been proposed for a space alongside the Civic Center.

Futian District masterplan by SWA Group

Three existing parks divided by major roads will be linked by a raised landscape of walkways, cycle paths and gardens called the Bridge Park.

Futian District masterplan by SWA Group

Above: a botanical garden has been proposed alongside Shenzhen Civic Center

“Our landscape and urban design strategies will rebalance Futian from a car-dominated city with a challenging street system to offer a more beautiful, more functional environment, from landscaped boulevards and greenspaces to plazas and large gathering spaces,” said Sean O’Malley, the principal leading the masterplan from SWA Group’s office in Laguna Beach, California.

The first phase of construction is expected to begin in the second half of 2013, with completion by autumn 2014.

Futian is home to the Shenzhen & Hong Kong Bi-City Biennale of Urbanism and Architecture, where we made a series of movies in 2009, including one about a project to build a farm in a city square and another looking at an installation of 10,000 garments manufactured in Shenzhen.

Other projects in Shenzhen we’ve featured recently include a registry office that looks like its covered in confetti and the Kingkey 100 skyscraper, the tallest building in the city.

See all our stories about Shenzhen »
See all our stories about masterplans »

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Future Project of the Year winner announced at World Architecture Festival

World Architecture Festival 2012: Heart of Doha, a 31-hectare masterplan designed by AECOM for the gateway to Inner Doha has been named Future Project of the Year at the World Architecture Festival in Singapore.

Heart of Doha by AECOM

Currently under construction, the project will form a gateway to the city that connects it with the waterfront, as well as with existing and proposed airports.

Heart of Doha by AECOM

The architects studied historical aerial photographs of Doha to develop a layout that follows traditional Qatari street patterns, then superimposed it over an orthogonal grid to allow room for modern day vehicles.

Heart of Doha by AECOM

The combination of these two layouts, which the architects refer to as “the grid and the lattice”, will create a complex web of streets that respect the Arab/Islamic vernacular, and are also oriented to capture the north-westerly sea breeze.

We’ve also announced winners for World Building of the Year and Landscape of the Year, as well as all the category winners from day one and day two.

Dezeen is media partner for the World Architecture Festival, which is taking place at the Marina Bay Sands hotel and conference centre. You can follow all our coverage of the event here, including a series of movies we filmed with programme director Paul Finch in the build-up to the event.

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Moscow set to double in size with new masterplan for city expansion

Capital Cities Planning Group Moscow expansion proposal

Dezeen News: a British and American proposal for a new district built around manmade waterways has been selected as part of a masterplan to double the size of Moscow in the next few decades.

An international jury selected the entry submitted by Capital Cities Planning Group, which comprises London-based landscape architects Gillespies, London and Edinburgh-based urban designers John Thompson & Partners and international engineering consultants Buro Happold.

Capital Cities Planning Group Moscow expansion proposal

The expansion project is part of the Russian government’s plans to double the size of Moscow, already a city of 11 million people, in order to attract business and build the capital’s global reputation.

The winning proposal, called ‘City in the Forest’, is arranged around a series of lakes designed by Gillespies. The development would house 1.7 million people and provide 800,000 jobs, mostly in government, education and business sectors.

Capital Cities Planning Group Moscow expansion proposal

John Thompson, chair of John Thompson & Partners, said the winning proposal offered “a model for the further expansion of Moscow through the creation of a properly serviced, zero-carbon, transit-orientated urban hierarchy set within a forest and lakeside landscape.”

In April we reported that international firm OMA had scored highest in the first round of the competition to oversee Moscow’s expansion.

Capital Cities Planning Group Moscow expansion proposal

Above image shows map of the proposed city expansion

We’ve previously featured two bridges designed by engineers Buro Happold – a bridge over the River Soar in Leicester and the as-yet-unbuilt Metro West bridge in the Liffey Valley near Dublin.

See all our stories about Russia »

Here’s the full press release:


Moscow Expansion Winning Team Announced
Capital Cities Planning Group (CCPG), an Anglo-American team including Gillespies, John Thompson & Partners and Buro Happold, has won a prestigious competition to plan the future expansion of the City of Moscow.

The international jury headed by Deputy Mayor Marat Khusnullin awarded two prizes; one to CCPG led by Urban Design Associates of the USA for the design and planning of the new Federal District, and the second to Antoine Grumbach & Jean-Michel Wilmotte of Paris for the overall planning of Moscow.

CCPG’s winning proposal calls for a new ‘City in the Forest’ for 1.7 million people, providing 800,000 new jobs with a focus around the ‘Triple Helix of Government, Education and Business’. The new layout reconfigures the 155 km2 earmarked for the district and looks to create an integrated, properly-planned urban hierarchy served by a transit-orientated movement system.

The winning design by CCPG featured a new mixed-use capital district configured around a series of lakes designed by the UK Landscape Design Practice Gillespies. Brian Evans, partner in charge of Gillespies Glasgow Office, who led the British side of the team said: “We are all knocked out by this recognition for our work on the world stage. It seems that our design to use the natural topography of the site to create a series of lakes as the setting for the new Federal District was one of the key factors in the jury’s mind when they appraised the different proposals”.

John Thompson, Chair of John Thompson & Partners & Honorary President of the Academy of Urbanism, said: “We are delighted that our team has won the competition for the design of the new Federal District, bringing together international best practice to create a model for the further expansion of Moscow through the creation of a properly serviced, zero-carbon, transit orientated urban hierarchy set within a forest and lakeside landscape.”

Earlier this year the Russian Federal Government announced that it was doubling the territory of Moscow to enable it to grow into a competitive 21st century world capital. In February 2012, Sergey Sobyanin, the Mayor of Moscow announced an international competition and selected 10 teams from around the world to prepare plans for the Moscow Region, for the City overall and for the planning and design of a new federal capital for the ministries of the federal government.

The Government of Moscow set up a 6 month, 3-stage process with all the teams working and reporting to the Moscow Government on a monthly basis. The finished work of all the teams is currently on show at a public exhibition in Gorky Park.

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Cultural Campus Frankfurt by Adjaye Associates

Cultural Campus Frankfurt by Adjaye Associates

Architect David Adjaye has revealed plans to group nine of Frankfurt’s existing cultural institutions onto a combined campus in the heart of the city.

Cultural Campus Frankfurt by Adjaye Associates

The 16.5 hectare site is currently occupied by Frankfurt University but will be vacant by 2014.

Cultural Campus Frankfurt by Adjaye Associates

Adjaye Associates are proposing to create a single shared foyer, which will connect each of the nine organisations.

Cultural Campus Frankfurt by Adjaye Associates

Apartments, offices and shops will also be included, creating a mix of uses across the site.

Cultural Campus Frankfurt by Adjaye Associates

We recently featured David Adjaye’s 2002 project Dirty House as part of our celebration of design in the London borough of Hackney. See the project here.

Here are some more details from Adjaye Associates:


Cultural Campus Frankfurt – Adjaye Associates
Architectural concept: “micro city”

The design concept rests on the extraction of the essential components of a city, which are then compressed to establish a mixture of different uses. The single ingredients become a city in microcosm, or a “micro city”. Within the composition, there are possibilities for people from the cultural industries, academics, residents and office workers to encounter one another within a rich, creative atmosphere. The design fosters interaction and animation thus resulting in new synergies between different creative disciplines.

The “micro city” comprises a central, public and multi-functional space, which combines the main performing spaces of the cultural institutions, retail, cafes and the market hall in an interesting juxtaposition within the main foyer. Forecourts on the perimeter accentuate access points to the main foyer also enabling circulation through the cultural campus, which is porous and open to the city. The different uses are also layered vertically, thus allowing the mix of uses to be carried into the topography.

Client: Forum Kulturcampus Frankfurt e.V.
Programme: urban concept study for a cultural campus which includes 9 cultural institutions and their main performing spaces and a mixture of other uses (retail, cafes, offices, residential)
Appointment: feasibility study
Site Area: masterplan site in total 16,5 hectares
Building Height: foyer 9m and main performing spaces 17m, higher buildings 25-54m
Number of storeys: foyer and main performing spaces I, higher buildings VI – XIII
No. of Offices: 13,0%
No. of Apartments: 33,7%
No. of Retail: 8,6%
No. of Cultural Use: 44,7%
Cladding – materials: glass/ stone

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

Here are some new images of the Apple campus by architects Foster + Partners, to be built in Cupertino, California.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

The hoop-shaped office building will be located a few blocks away from Apple’s existing headquarters and will accommodate up to 13,000 employees.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

The campus will provide office, research and development facilities, as well as a company fitness centre, a cafe and a 1000-seat auditorium.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

A circular park for staff is proposed for the centre of the building.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

Two further buildings will provide additional research facilities, whilst an onsite power plant will provide the majority of electricity for the campus.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

Dezeen announced that Norman Foster was working on designs for the Apple campus back in December – see our earlier Dezeen Wire.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

Other projects this year by Foster + Partners include an Abu Dhabi shopping centre that combines high-end boutiques with independent local food and craft markets and headquarters for Moroccan bank BMCE in Moroccosee all our stories about Foster + Partners here.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster + Partners

The following project details are from the architects:


Apple Campus 2

Project Overview

Apple proposes to create Apple Campus 2 – an integrated 21st century campus surrounded by green space.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

Click above for larger image

This new development will provide a serene and secure environment reflecting Apple’s values of innovation, ease of use and beauty.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

Click above for larger image

The state-of-the-art office, research and development facilities include strategies to minimize energy demand, reduce car travel and increase the use of reclaimed water.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

Click above for larger image

The single building comprises approximately 2.8 million square feet over four stories.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

Click above for larger image

Campus amenities will include a striking café within the main building, a separate corporate fitness center and a corporate auditorium seating 1,000 people. Parking will be provided under the main building and in one multi-story parking structure along the 280 Freeway.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

Click above for larger image

The Campus will feature an on-site low carbon Central Plant situated along the 280 Freeway that will supply the majority of the power needed for the Campus.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

In addition, research facilities comprising approximately 300,000 square feet will be located east of North Tantau Avenue. These buildings will house technical support functions that need to be located adjacent to the main building.

Apple Campus 2 by Foster Partners

Project Objectives

The objectives of the proposed project are to:

  • To maximize efficiency and convenience to Apple’s employees, develop a news campus in close proximity to Apple’s Infinite Loop Campus.
  • Create a new campus that provides for co-location of services and consolidation of employees in a single distinctive office, research and development building, thereby promoting shared creativity and collaboration, reducing the overall building footprint on the site, and maximizing the amount of landscaped green space.
  • Create a physically unified campus community that respects Apple’s security needs (in part through perimeter protection), improves internal circulation and eliminates unnecessary access points by consolidating the existing properties within the campus.
  • Optimize the site design to balance cut and fill operations to the maximum extent practicable and create a grading plan that accommodates the single distinctive building design.
  • Respond to Apple’s current and future business needs with a campus plan that maximizes employee use and incorporates design and use flexibility to respond to future business needs.
  • Minimize the reliance on electricity provided by the grid by generating a significant amount of the Campus’s energy needs at an on-site Central Plant.
  • Accommodate up to 13,000 employees.
  • Provide an expanse of open and green space for Apple employees’ enjoyment.
  • Create a distinctive and inspiring 21st Century workplace.
  • Exceed economic, social, and environmental sustainability goals through integrated design and development.

Owner: Apple, Inc.
Architect: Foster + Partners
Engineer: ARUP
Planning Consultant: Kier & Wright


See also:

.

Stockholmsporten
masterplan by BIG
Masdar Institute campus
by Foster + Partners
West Kowloon Cultural
District by Foster + Partners

New Holland Island by Work AC

New Holland Island by Work AC

New York architects Work AC have won a competition to design a cultural hub on a St Petersburg island that has been closed to the public for over 300 years.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Former military warehouses occupy the eight-hectare New Holland Island and are to be fully restored to accommodate commercial spaces, galleries and educational facilities.

New Holland Island by Work AC

An elevated snaking promenade will weave in and out of each warehouse to provide viewing platforms.

New Holland Island by Work AC

A canopy nestled against two corner warehouses will shelter an exhibition area and garden.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Lakes and lawns will surround the buildings, while car parking and infrastructure are to be concealed beneath a grassy slope.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Visitors will be able to overlook the island from a tethered balloon that will float up into the sky.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Eight shortlisted entries for the competition, which was organised by The Architecture Foundation, have been on show at the Central Naval Museum in St Petersburg since 15th July.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Other masterplans featured in recent months include a flood-prone Vietnamese district and a zoological park on artificial islandssee all our stories about masterplans here.

New Holland Island by Work AC

More projects by Work AC on Dezeen include an urban farm of giant cardboard tubes and the headquarters for a fashion labelclick here to see all the projects.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Here are some more details from New Holland Development:


Winner announced for New Holland Island Competition

The architectural practice WORKac is the winner of the competition to select a master planning consultant for the future development of New Holland Island in St Petersburg.

New Holland Island by Work AC

The competition, organised by The Architecture Foundation, invited entries from all over the world and an exhibition of proposals recently went on show at the Central Naval Museum in St Petersburg overlooking the New Holland site where it attracted 6,617 visitors within a two week period. Opinions left on comment cards filled out by the public at the exhibition overwhelmingly coincided with the views of the competition organisers in supporting WORKac’s vision.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Click above for larger image

Based in New York City, WORK Architecture Company (WORKac) is involved with numerous cultural institutions and urban planning projects. The practice were the master planners of the new BAM cultural district in Brooklyn and the award-winning architects of Diane von Furstenburg’s Headquarters in New York’s Meatpacking District. It is currently working on three major museum projects for the Blaffer Museum in Houston, the Clark Art Institute at Mass MoCA and the new Children’s Museum of the Arts in New York City. WORKac is also the winner of the Hua Qiang Bei redevelopment competition at the heart of Shenzhen, China. Identified by Icon magazine as one of the 25 most influential design firms in the world, the practice has won numerous honours and, in 2009, was among the finalists for the US National Design Awards.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Click above for larger image

New Holland is an 8-hectare island bordered by two canals and a river in the heart of St Petersburg, within 20-minutes walk of the Hermitage and the city’s other major cultural sites.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Click above for larger image

The island was conceived by Peter the Great in 1719, and became Russia’s first military port in 1721. It belonged to the military since its foundation and had thus been closed to the general public for 300 years.

New Holland Island by Work AC

Click above for larger image

WORKac’s winning entry creates a public park, whose topography transforms New Holland Island into an outdoor amphitheatre and performance space. An elevated promenade brings the park to the interior of the existing structures, connecting a series of programmatic ‘voids’ – art, design, education and commercial – that builds on St Petersburg’s rich cultural history to create a new vibrant cultural hub for the city.

New Holland Island by Work AC

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WORKac principals Amale Andraos and Dan Wood said: “We are very excited at the opportunity to work with the Iris Foundation and NHD on this critically important project for one of the world’s most beautiful cities. Our master plan balances preservation with innovation, respecting St Petersburg’s past while paving the way for its continued artistic development and future.”

New Holland Island by Work AC

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As the project moves from the concept phase to the planning phase, New Holland Development and the Iris Foundation plan to hold a series of closed and public discussions with interested parties to ensure that the public’s input continues to be a central part of New Holland’s development.

New Holland Island by Work AC

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See also:

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Stockholmsporten
by BIG
Zoological Park by TN Plus
and Beckmann N’Thépé
Huaxi city centre
by MAD and others