PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

Architecture firm Kokaistudios have completed a new building housing the faculty of law at Peking University in Beijing.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

The top part of the building overhangs the bottom structure on all sides, with a rhythm of rectangular apertures covering its facade.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

The building is clad in local stone.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

See all our stories on buildings for education in our Dezeen archive.

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PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

Photographs are by Charlie Xia.

The following information is from the architects:


PKU UNIVERSITY OF LAW

BALANCE ARCHITECTURE WITH LIGHT

A challenging project for the most prestigious University in China in the heart of its historical campus.

In 2009 a prestigious American Foundation and Beijing University invited Kokaistudios to design the building for the new faculty of law located in a prestigious location within the historical campus of China leading University.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

This particular site, where the pagoda symbol of the university is standing, required considerable effort in terms of design in order to find architectural answers that could satisfy and meld in a harmonious way the heritage elements. The beautiful natural environment and the new contemporary building.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

This prestigious project, completed in October 2010, is considered the milestone of a new era for Beijing University, and a symbol for better and more environmentally sustainable standard of living for the future University Community and for architectural buildings within that community.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

This project has been conceived on a rigid volumetric shape imposed by the strict regulation protecting the historical site and at the same time by the necessity to fulfill all the functional requirements of the new faculty. The rigorous style requested to be accepted by the large number of heritage commissions have been interpretated in creative way by Kokaistudios by proposing an elegant use of few materials, concrete plasters and local stones with capabilities to transmit day light and a clever use of skylights, sinking gardens in order to increase the use of natural light and thermal efficiency of the building.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

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Kokaistudios transformed the facades to become light filters and diffusing soft daylight light all over the interiors. The entire system of internal spaces has been designed by our team so to upgrade the standards of working, living, and studying of the future professors and students, using sustainable materials and creating aggregation facilities and spaces that could satisfy the flexible demands of the faculty in the future.

PKU University of Law by Kokaistudios

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Architects: Kokaistudios
Location: Beijing, China
Team: Andrea Destefanis, Filippo Gabbiani, Li Wei, Fang Wei Yi, Liu Wen Wen, Yu Feng
Local
Architect: BIAD
Structure: BIAD
Mechanics & Electricity: BIAD
Project Area: 10,000 sqm


See also:

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Jiangsu Art Museum by KSP Jürgen Engel ArchitektenClapham Manor Primary School by dRMMPearl Academy of Fashion by Morphogenesis

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

Beijing studio Sunlay Design have designed this building to house the headquarters for a technology park in Huainan City, Anhui Province, China.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

The building will consist of two structures – a tower block and a two-pronged cantilevered building – which will be connected by a glazed walkway on the second floor.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

The building will comprise a five-storey office building, an exhibition centre, an underground car park and a public square.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

Construction is due to start in 2011.

All our stories on buildings with cantilevers »

The following information is from Sunlay Design:


Chinese architects office SUNLAY DESIGN shared with us their project for the HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial park.

Located in HuaiNan city, AnHui province in China, this project mainly is a headquarter for the park that is going to be built. The building’s consists of 2 architectural parts connected by a flowing bridge on the 2nd floor.

West part – a 5 storied office building with a height of 23.1 m, total area 5500 sqm. – East part – a 2 storied exhibition center with a height of 18.45 m, total area 2800 sqm. – A public square with an area of 780 sqm and an underground parking space with an area of 3200 sqm , through which people can find access to both building parts.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

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Building Concept :

The idea of the building’s massing and spaces comes from the melting ice cubes. Ice cubes tend to creat a soft connection between each other as they melt down.

This concept starts with normal boxes through which architects get integrated and fluent spaces by disasemble and reconnect those boxes with curved surfaces. This kind of space organization brings the building much more complexity and diversity.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

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Ice Cube Pattern :

Architects took the cladding gaps as part of the designning elements while they confronted with the cladding division problem, same to the massing, concept for the cladding also came from ice cubes. Ice cubs present an edge-to-center colour gradient due to the refraction happend as light beam comes through.

Edges always seem darker and more solid than it appears in the center. Architects tried to get the same effect by controling the gaps’ distance and dencity, following expansion images are the final result for claddings.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

Panel typology

Inorder to creat an gray-tuned gradient pattern, there are 3 different sizes of pannels padding to each surface, pannels with size 2 will be randomly put between pannel 1 and pannel 3 inorder to creat a smooth transation.

Panel 1,2,3 will be used for facade surfaces wile pannel 2,3,4 will be used for curved surfaces, hence there will be 4 pannel sizes in total.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

Surface Optimization :

The building is mainly consists of 11 facaded surfaces and 14 curved surfaces that will be covered by cladding. 2 of these curved surfaces will be double curvature surfaces while 12 of them were optimized to single curved surfaces inorder to make cladding division and manufacturing easier to go.

Location :

The project is located in the far east to the industrial park which faces the south of ShunGeng mountain and takes a tunnel to get access to the center of the city.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

Program :

B1: parking, staff restraunt and mech rooms
1F: exhibtion and sales center
2F: offices, meeting rooms and muti-functional rooms
3F: offices, meeting rooms and archive rooms
4F: offices, meeting rooms
5F: guest rooms

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

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Landscape :

Treated as an extension of the building, paving that surround the architecture is designed to embrace the connection part of the building where cladding tries to touch the ground, standing infront of the building, people will find cladding pattern gradiently change in to paving pattern, which makes the building and landscape a integrated whole.

HuaiNan Animation Technology Industrial Park by Sunlay Design

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Structure solution :

The 2 parts of the building use individual structure system connected by a bridge on the 2nd floor. Both parts of the building use steel structure.

The maximum cantilevered part length is 20 meters, where there are enhanced bracing and steel beams for those cantilevers at the end of each part.


See also:

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Dove of Peace by
Sunlay Design
FRIEM Headquarters by OnsitestudioMore architecture
on Dezeen

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

Henn StudioB, the Berlin design and research studio of Henn Architekten, have won a competition to design a new business district in Wenzhou, China.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

The Central Business District is located where the Ou Jiang river meets the East China Sea and will comprise five towers of differing heights.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

The towers will be situated in a staggered row to provide views of the river, while at street level a series of green spaces and walkways will weave inbetween the structures.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

The masterplan will include a five star hotel, offices, commercial space and a public park.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

See all our stories on skyscrapers in our special category.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

Here’s some more information about the project:


New Central Business District, Wenzhou

HENN ARCHITEKTEN have won the first prize in the international competition to design the new Central Business District in Wenzhou, China. The proposal was designed by HENN ARCHITEKTEN’s Design & Research Studio HENN StudioB.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

Wenzhou lies within a mountainous region of Zhejiang Province where the Ou Jiang River meets the East China Sea. The traditional trading town opened to foreign trade in 1876 and as an international port is one of today’s key production locations for the consumer goods industry in China. The centrepiece of the future Central Business District comprises offices, a five-star hotel, commercial space and a public park.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

The Wenzhou coastline is interspersed with an intricate network of small and large rivers. The proposed design picks up on the river delta image and transposes it onto an organic park landscape which opens towards the sea. The green corridor leading out of the city continues across the site, where it branches out and forms an undulating connection between the city and the riverfront.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

On ground level, this architectural landscape merges with the flowing form of the buildings and simultaneously traces the movement of their users. The five towers stand in a staggered row to ensure a largely unrestricted view of the river.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

Their height reflects that of the surrounding buildings in the south west and rises in a wave towards the river, where it defines the edge of the city on the bank of the Ou Jiang.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

The rolling landscape provides open spaces in various forms – from private inner courtyards and broad pedestrian walkways to urban parks. These layers of space offer access from all sides and encourage interaction between people and places.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

The competition marks a beginning for the future development of Wenzhou. In this way, the Central Business District is a model for the process of transformation taking place in Chinese cities and their race for a distinct identity in the changing economic climate.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

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Like many other economically aspiring cities in China, Wenzhou faces the challenge of establishing an urban identity that unites local traditions with viable concepts for the future.

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

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Client: Wenzhou-Oujiang City Development + Construction Commanding Center
Location: Wenzhou, China
Program: Office, Conference, Hotel, Retail, Park
Area: 400,000 sqm
Competition 2010: 1st Prize
Local Partner: IPPR International Engineering Corporation
Structural Engineering & Building Services: IPPR International Engineering Corporation
Design Team: Leander Adrian, Daniel da Rocha, Martin Henn, Ingrid Hufnagl, Markus Jacobi, Klaus Ransmayr, Max Schwitalla, Xin Wang, Sun Wei

Central Business District Wenzhou by Henn Architekten

Click for larger image


See also:

.

Huaxi city centre by
MAD and others
Raffles City Hangzhou by UNStudioMore skyscrapers
on Dezeen

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

Zaha Hadid Architects have unveiled their design for the largest cultural building in China, to be located in Chengdu in Sichuan Province.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

The Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre will comprise three auditoria, an art museum, exhibition space and conference centre, plus restaurants, bars and shops.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

The facade will be covered in criss-crossing louvres to provide shade from the sun.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

All our stories about Zaha Hadid »

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

The following information is from Zaha Hadid Architects:


CHENGDU CONTEMPORARY ART CENTRE [CHENGDU, CHINA]

The result of an international design competition in 2007, Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre will be a new cultural destination for Sichuan Province and will provide Chengdu with an unprecedented collection of world-class arts, performance, leisure, and congress venues.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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CCAC will be a regional art and music centre of international standing. CCAC accommodates three auditoria, an art museum, an exhibition centre, a conference centre, a learning centre, bars, restaurants and shops. The largest of the three halls, a multifunctional theatre, seats up to 2,000 people.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The second hall caters for lyrical theatre and music events, with a seating arrangement of up to 870 people. The third auditorium will be used as a music hall. Designed for natural acoustic, this hall will provide space for an audience of up to 1,000.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The conference centre comprises 8,000m2, which can be separated into 16 equal and independent accessible conference rooms. A flexible 10,000m2 exhibition centre is located at the main entrance level.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The art museum comprises approximately 15,000m2 net exhibition area which is located below the roof and will take advantage of natural lit exhibition spaces. Our design aims to resolve the complexities of the programme, while combining spatial clarity with the design of a unique and iconic structure.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The undulating building geometry suggests a rolling landscape, inspired by the topography of Sichuan Province. CCAC’s elongated design will contrast the vertical tower structures surrounding the site. Its soaring aerodynamic shape and Yin Yang like shape evokes traditional Chinese symbols.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The new building is characterised by its aerodynamic geometry and flexible performance spaces. Adjacent to CCAC, extensive new landscaping is designed to strengthen the links with the urban fabric. The design of the space adjacent to the building is an integral part of the architectural design.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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Our proposal for the 140,000m2 landscape area complements the exhibition building and creates a welcoming public realm within a diffuse and peripheral surrounding. Our proposal for the new Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre is a unique structure with a strong sense of identity and character. From afar, it is highly identifiable and offers a strong image and orientation.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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Built in close proximity to Chengdu City Centre, this scheme for a 200,000m2 performance, arts, and congress complex will consolidate Chengdu’s reputation as a cultural destination while providing an iconic architectural image for the city.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The architectural concept has been developed in response to articulate the client’s programme and the urban parameters. CCAC thereby forms a graceful, iconic landmark for the city of Chengdu.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The concept for CCAC is to use the most advanced architectural and engineering technologies in response to the brief, to create a visually striking new landmark that will act as a gateway to the city. With its informal atmosphere and unrivalled views out across the landscaping, CCAC should become one of the city’s great social spaces as well as a regional cultural centre of international standing.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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Zaha Hadid Architects design concept originates from an understanding of the urban dynamics and the client’s programme. Rising to a height of 70 meters, the building’s undulating form creates its own distinctive profile within an emerging cluster of tall buildings. In contrast to the neighbouring high-rise buildings, the 470m elongated structure extends almost parallel to Tianfu Avenue.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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Metaphorically speaking, the building’s elongated, curvilinear shape appears like a rolling landscape, inspired by the topography of Sichuan Province. The undulating shell has been designed in response to articulate the programme. Geometrically speaking, the shape has been derived by twisting a rectangular tube, creating three distinct programmatic areas. The lowest part, the centre of the building, accommodates the main atrium. The head to the north accommodates all performance and art related areas. The tail to the south accommodates the conference centre and the exhibition centre.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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Adjacent to the building, over 60 per cent of the remaining site is given over to parkland; the informal planting of mature trees creates the impression of a wooded environment adjacent to the eastern site border. The structure is set back from the street to create a generous public realm. The building complements the opposite Aquarium, creating an urban plaza with a central fountain.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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A water amphitheatre forms the focus of the site northern edge. The use of an orthogonal, repetitive plan and structural system for the back of house areas will help for the use of standardized components and to simplify the construction process.

Chengdu Contemporary Art Centre by Zaha Hadid Architects

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The façade has been designed to articulate the programme and to emphasize the iconic structure. The shingle-like glazing will create an ever changing appearance once moving around the building. The gradually changing louvers are designed to maximize the views and to minimize solar gain.


See also:

.

Evelyn Grace Academy
by Zaha Hadid
King Abdullah II House of Culture & Art by Zaha HadidEli & Edythe Broad Art Museum by Zaha Hadid

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

Hong Kong studio Davidclovers have covered the interior of this house in aluminium strips to create patterns of light and shadow that change throughout the day.

House DE by Davidclovers

Situated at Clearwater Bay in Hong Kong and called House DE, the design merged two existing homes into one,  joined by three staircases.

House DE by Davidclovers

The undulating fins admit natural light through the ceiling during the daytime while emitting artificial illumination at night.

House DE by Davidclovers

Photographs are by Almond Chu.

House DE by Davidclovers

Here’s more from the architects:


Davidclover

House DE is an “infill” townhouse, spectacularly sited on a hillside above Clearwater Bay, Hong Kong.

House DE by Davidclovers

Combining two existing units into one, the design uses the volumes of three staircases to blend, burrow and interlock spaces vertically across four floors.

House DE by Davidclovers

Each “interaction” is materially monolithic, using stone, wood and a series of delicate aluminum fins.

House DE by Davidclovers

Defined by these fins, the texture and form of the lantern-volume subtly changes shape and depth, casting shadow and emitting light in different ways throughout the day.

House DE by Davidclovers

Each stair-volume pries open the house vertically and horizontally, pulling in daylight and emitting artificial light.

House DE by Davidclovers

Thickening the existing building enclosure and stretching it across the front and rear, the bedrooms and new master suite on the upper floors are protected from the elements, yet opens up to views of the natural surroundings.

House DE by Davidclovers

Towards the South, the facade thickens and torques, providing shade for bedrooms and balconies; while on the North, the facade transforms into a garden trellis for an outdoor dining terrace.

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers

House DE by Davidclovers


See also:

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Barker Residence by
Davidclovers
Yud Yud by Davidclovers
and C.E.B. Reas
House in Fukuyama by
Suppose Design Office

Nadav Kander

Une belle série “Yangtsé, le long fleuve” du photographe Nadav Kander, né à Tel Aviv et travaillant en Grande-Bretagne. Ce travail documente le changement qui affecte les paysages et les communautés du fleuve, en Chine. Il été récompensé par le prix Pictet en 2009.



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