Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

A city for fish modelled on a high-rise development underway in Xi’an, China, has been installed in a gallery next to the construction site (+ slideshow).

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
Photograph by Lindle_Bukor

Vienna-based artists Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor worked with Beijing artist Lu Yang to install fish tanks shaped like skyscrapers in a gallery space next to a large urban development.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

The tanks form a 1:60 scale model of the adjacent high-rises currently under construction.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

One thousand five hundred Goldfish inhabit the glass towers to represent the people due to live in this development once complete.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

“Fishpond City is inhabited by goldfish, an ancient Chinese symbol for luck, prosperity and fertility,” said the group of artists. “These residents act as a bridge to perception and empathy of urban space.”

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

At 1:60 scale a day lasts for 24 minutes and this accelerated passing of time is simulated by coloured LEDs housed in the smaller glass boxes.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
Photograph by Lindle_Bukor

The lights glow orange in the east to represent dawn, shine bright white at noon then fade to red for dusk. Sounds of early morning traffic, street markets and conversations are also played in the space.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
Photograph by Lindle_Bukor

Visitors can walk between the tanks, the tallest of which are around head-height.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

To keep the tanks clean, water is syphoned under a glass floor etched with patterns of trees to signify parkland in the development. The water passes through a filtration system before being pumped back into the fish city.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
Photograph by Lindle_Bukor

The artists created the installation as an observation of the rapid urban development in the provincial capitals of central China.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

“Fishpond City is a measuring tool for cultural identification of urban space and reflects on the high speed development of a society,” they said.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor

Other habitats for fish on Dezeen include Roger Arquer’s fifteen variations on traditional fishbowls and an aquarium shaped like a zeppelin.

See more design for animals »
See more architecture and design in Xi’an »

Photographs are by Clemens Schneider unless otherwise stated.


A city for fish in China’s booming centre

The Chinese hotspots of turbo urbanisation have shifted: the large construction sites, engines of economic growth have moved inland to the large provincial capitals, like Xi’an in Shaanxi. Literally thousands of high rises and shopping centres grow simultaneously, nerved by wide boulevards.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
Water filtration system under the gallery floor. Photograph by Lindle_Bukor

Vienna-based artists Raoul Bukor and Christian Lindle in cooperation with Beijing based artist Lu Yang emerged themselves into this radical change of space by erecting a city themselves: Fishpond City – a city for fish. This permanent installation is a true to scale model of a future district of Xi’an and located right next to the construction site.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
The high-rise development that provided the model for the installation. Photograph by Lindle_Bukor

Like a real city the model is a living system, influenced by ecological and demographic aspects. Fishpond City is inhabited by goldfish, an ancient Chinese symbol for luck, prosperity and fertility. These residents act as a bridge to perception and empathy of urban space. The installation is accompanied by 50 portraits showing the people involved in the construction of the new district as well as in its artistic interpretation, who after all accomplish Chinas urbanisation.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
Urban development in Xi’an

Fishpond City is a measuring tool for cultural identification of urban space and reflects on the high speed development of a society.

Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle and Raoul Bukor
Installation layout

The post Fishpond City by Lu Yang, Christian Lindle
and Raoul Bukor
appeared first on Dezeen.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Rather than design a run-of-the-mill skyscraper for a new hotel in Xian, China, architects 3Gatti decided to put lots of smaller buildings on a gigantic set of shelves.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Houses and apartment blocks on the lower levels of the Shelf Hotel will contain hotel suites.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Office blocks will be placed nearer the top.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Two shelves will be omitted from the lower part of the tower, creating an elevated garden including a courtyard surrounded by restaurants.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

The project is currently awaiting approval from the local authority.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Check out a hotel in the Netherlands that looks like a pile of houses here.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

We’ve featured a few projects by Rome and Shanghai firm 3Gatti Architecture Studio – see them here.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Here’s some more explanation from 3Gatti Architecture Studio:


Shelf Hotel

This project is intended to be the the first contemporary building in the contemporary Xian; want to be an architecture in open dialogue with the rest of the world in a multicultural international architectural language and at the same time strongly attached to the Xian and Chinese traditions.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

One main purpose of this design is to follow the needs of different inhabitant without loosing the power of a strong landmark building in the cityscape.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

In the common buildings the design is a dam imposed by the architect to the mutating needs of the people and of the developing history of the city. This building wants to be an open matrix to be filled during time with the mutating expectations from a growing culture and society.This matrix will be the more expensive part of the building that of course is the structure, the only element very difficult to mutate during time.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

The objects that will fill the matrix will be built following the different owners identities, functions and real estate needs in a more free and low cost construction methods.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Working 7 years as an architect in China I learned that the construction here follow very strictly and spontaneously the flow of economy without many constrains from regulations, planners and building managements.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Usually architects built objects where the integrity and personality is made by the beauty of the exterior shape and material, shapes and material that have to stay clean and unchanged till the end of the building life. That’s maybe possible in a country where the managements and regulations are very strict and conservative and where probably the economy is very slow creating no development acceleration.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Is not the case of China. Here all architects get frustrated because they can make pictures to their beautiful creations only in the first month life of the building, after that inhabitants start to put unwanted attachments to the building: advertising signs, volume extensions, additional decorations and other additions following their own living or business needs and personalities.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Our design want to make of this dynamic attitude of Chinese culture the real power of the building facade; so that every change during time will give not less but more beauty to the building look and overall concept.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Till the sixties it always have been a dream for architects to create an highrise building where to show the identities and personalities of each inhabitant instead of building an anonymous facade to represent the hundreds of people and business going on inside the building. This can be the right opportunity to realize this dream emphasizing the beauty of the collage aesthetics. If this was intended to be a design for our parents probably was better to empathize the deep meaning of a unique culture making and object with an unambiguous hidden spirit to be discovered by research and abnegation.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

But this actually is a design oriented to the future and to the next generation like all works of responsible architects should be. Observing young people you will notice that they are looking for a life with a simultaneity of stimuli, they are used to live in an interactive environment with many short experiences instead of a unique deep unequivocal one. They are moving in masses naively, led by a revolutionary instinct towards the collective creation and without regards for personal creativity, I’m sure they are the true prophets, those who will guide us towards an amazing future.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

This is a design for them, its a way to attract them speaking their own language. The design will show them a variety of different spaces, different facades, different cultural identities, different experiences. But instead of attracting them in the chaos of the city with its inhuman spaces, we will bring them in a natural and peaceful variety of environments where to learn about themselves, their own culture and the culture from their peers around the world. This building wants to represent their spirit of collective creation and the facade will literally represent this continuous and interactive flow of creations. This building wants to represent their spirit of collective creation and the facade will literally represent this continuous and interactive flow of creations.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

One of the biggest problems to solve in this design was how to get rid of the building shadow on the neighbor residence buildings. Chinese regulation is very strict on this and don’t allow more than certain amount of shadow time cover every day. Our building is 100 meters tall and quite large. Thanks to software analysis we discover the critical point to be not too far from the building base where the shadow actually is not moving but is almost permanent all day long. We spontaneously solved this problem by rising the upper part of the volume so that the sun can reach exactly the critical area in need for more light. In this way we opened an opportunity for a large garden to be placed inside this forced gap. This garden will be the heart of the hotel together with the top roof garden where we placed a Chinese courtyard residence traditional typology (siheyuan).

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Those green opportunities will be the location for special function related with the exhibition and research about Chinese traditional cultural activities such as calligraphy, tea and taiji together with Buddhist meditation and learning areas. Will be also the place where to grow vegetable and other special food in green houses and water pools.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Restaurants and lounge spaces will be also placed in those green areas and will be visible from the skylights and transparent floors of the below and upper hotel rooms. The green will be located in small amount in each double floor of the highrise, especially in the gaps between the object/houses that fills the slabs matrix structure.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

The structure will be composed of pillars and inverted slabs every two floors. In this way is possible to take use of the space between the beams for different purpose like for storage spaces, soil for trees and green areas, pools, mechanical equipment and other functions adaptable to the space under the floor surface.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Most of the houses actually will not be completely autonomous volumes but will be aggregate together and divided only by apparent front gaps so not to waste habitable square meters.

In the ground floor the houses volumes will extend to the front area creating small plazas together with green walls of bamboo. Those will be small spaces in human scale so to be able to make people enjoy open air restaurant areas or outdoor activities.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

We believe in this way to create a sustainable project that can last during the years developing its spirit from the ancient Chinese traditions to the future inevitable global culture.

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Architecture firm: 3GATTI
Chief architect: Francesco Gatti
Project manager: Borja Gómez
Collaborators: Tyler Johnson, Karen Tang, John Jiang, Lisa Liu
Structural engineer: Jun Gang Sun
Client: Renhe Estate (Shaanxi Weizhi Group)
Location: Keji Road, Gaoxin district, Xian, China
Programme: Five star Hotel, Retail, Restaurants, Spa, Gym, Office, Parking, Green Park
Total area: 50,000 m²
Design period: December 2011

Shelf Hotel by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Materials: steel and reinforced concrete structure, bamboo, wood, recycled local stones, recycled gray bricks, recycled terracotta bricks, corrugated steel, glass

The Big Dig

L’architecte et le paysagiste berlinois Topotek1 a pensé ce “Big Dig” voulant représenter un énorme trou menant à l’autre partie du monde. Le tout à l’occasion du Xi’an International Horticultural Exposition 2011. Plus de visuels de ce projet fou dans la suite de l’article.



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the-big-dig2

the-big-dig1




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Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

This park in Xi’an, China, by international architects West 8 recently opened to the public and contains red bridges offering vantage points.

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

The Garden of 10,000 Bridges actually contains only five bridges, which are all part of a winding trail that snakes through the grasses.

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

The project was designed as part of the Xi’an International Horticultural Exposition 2011.

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

More projects by West 8 on Dezeen »

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

Here is some information from the architects:


On the Xi’an International Horticultural Exhibition the West 8 designed Garden of 10,000 Bridges has opened to the public.

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

As both a distinct sense of enclosure and vantage points are provided, the Garden plays with the sensation of surprise. In the design advantage is taken of the strategic, central position of the plot, and views to other parts of the exhibition are integrated with those to the features of the park and surrounding landscape.

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

Gardens tell a story. They combine poetry and narrative. The Garden of 10,000 Bridges represents the human life; the path of people’s lifetime, which is a route of uncertainty and burden, but also of highlights and elation. The garden design takes you on this walk of life as a meandering, winding trail – continuous and like a labyrinth. It lets you find your way through nature and takes you over 10,000 bridges.

Garden of 10,000 Bridges by West 8

The Xi’an International Horticulture Exhibition 2011 is open until 22 October 2011.


See also:

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Cirkelbroen by
Olafur Eliasson
River Soar bridge by
Explorations & Buro Happold
Castleford Bridge by
McDowell+Benedetti