Shenzhen International Energy Mansion by BIG

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Danish architects Bjarke Ingels Group have won an international competition to design a low-energy tower for the Shenzhen Energy Company in Shenzhen, China.

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The 200m-tall headquarters features a folded facade to shade the interior from the sun while solar panels help to reduce energy use by 60%.

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More BIG: see our recent story on Astana National Library in Kazakhstan by BIG.

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Here’s some info from BIG:

BIG to design sustainable skyscraper in Shenzhen, China.

BIG, in collaboration with ARUP and Transsolar, was awarded first-prize in an international competition to design Shenzhen International Energy Mansion, the regional headquarters for the Shenzhen Energy Company.

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The purpose of the international design competition was to find a sustainable and efficient solution for the Shenzhen Energy Company office headquarters. Located in the centre of Shenzhen, the 96,000 square meter project will be integrated with the surrounding environment and designed to withstand the tropical climate of the city. BIG’s winning proposal was selected by the jury experts from Shenzhen Municipal Planning Bureau chaired by Alejandro Zaera-Polo and client representatives.

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The headquarters rises 200 meters creating a new landmark visible from the highway in the cultural, political and business center of Shenzhen. BIG envisions combining a practical and efficient floor plan layout with a sustainable façade that both, passively and actively reduce the energy consumption of the building. The façade is conceived as a folded skin that shades the office complex from direct sunlight and integrates solar thermal panels, reducing the overall energy consumption of the building.

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Design Evolution
The skyscraper has evolved as an economically efficient way to provide flexible, functional and well illuminated workspaces for dense populations of professionals. It has, however, evolved at a time when air conditioning and electric lighting are merely seen as modern solutions to modern demand, without thought being given to environmental consequences or energy shortages.

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Today, the skyscraper needs to evolve into a new sustainable species. It must retain its highly evolved qualities such as flexibility, daylight, views, density and general usability while advancing new and untested attributes such as ways of combining maximum daylight exposure with minimal sunshine exposure or integrated ways of limiting the need for cooling.

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“We propose to make the Shenzhen Energy Mansion the first specimen of a new species of office buildings that exploits the buildings interface with the external elements – sun, daylight, humidity, wind – as a source to create maximum comfort and quality inside. The Shenzhen Energy Mansion will appear as a subtle mutation of the classic skyscraper – a natural evolution rather than a desperate revolution.”
Bjarke Ingels, Founding Partner, BIG.

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Curtain wall
The traditional glass façade has little insulation leaving the offices overheated by direct sunlight. This results in excessive energy consumption for air conditioning and the need for a heavy glass coating that makes the view seem permanently dull and grey.

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“The towers are based on an efficient and well-proven floor plan enclosed in a skin specifically modified and optimized for the local climate. By focusing on the envelope, the façade, we are able to enhance the sustainable performance of the building drastically.”
Andreas Klok Pedersen, Project Leader, BIG.

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By folding the façade in an origami like shape we achieve a structure with closed and open parts. The closed parts provide a highly-insulated façade, while blocking the direct sunlight. On the outside the closed parts are fitted with solar thermal heat panels that power the air conditioning and provide dehumidification for the working spaces.

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The folded wall provides a free view through clear glass in one direction creating a condition with plenty of diffused daylight by reflecting the direct sunlight between the interior panels. Even with direct sun from east or west, the majority of the solar rays reflect off the glass, due to the flat angle of the window. The reflected rays increase the efficiency of solar thermal energy panels. The combination of minimal passive solar heating and active solar panels reduce the energy consumption by more than 60%.

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SHENZHEN INTERNATIONAL ENERGY MANSION CREDIT LIST:

ARCHITECT: BIG
CLIENT: Shenzhen Energy Company
COLLABORATORS: ARUP, Transsolar
SIZE: 96.000 M2
LOCATION: Shenzhen, China
STATUS: 1st Prize

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Partner-In-Charge: Bjarke Ingels
Project Leader: Andreas Klok Pedersen
Team: Cat Huang, Alex Cozma, Fan Zhang, Kuba Snopek, Flavien Menu, Stanley Lung

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More Dezeen stories about Shenzhen:

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Shenzhen Crystal Island by OMA and Urbanus

Oogst 1000 Wonderland by Tjep.

Here’s the third installment from the Oogst self-sufficient farming project by Dutch designers Tjep.: Oogst 1000 Wonderland, which features a farm, restaurant, hotel and amusement park designed to sustain 1,000 visitors a day.

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Like Oogst 1 Solo (a farm designed to sustain one person) and Oogst 100 Community (designed to house and feed up to 100 people), this design aims to cater for visitors by providing everything they need and recycling all waste.

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All food is grown and raised on site, hotel guests stay for free but must work on the farm and waste is used to generate more energy through a bio-gas energy system, meaning visitors are paid to use the toilets.

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The complete Oogst project, in three chapters, will be presented as part of an exhibition at Design Huis in Eindhoven next week as part of an exhibition called Boer zoekt stijl, curated by Li Edelkoort.

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Here’s some more text from Tjep.:

Oogst 1000 Wonderland

After Oogst 1 Solo and Oogst 100 Community, here is the third and last of three proposals by Dutch designers Tjep. for a self-sufficient farm: Oogst 1000 Wonderland. Please visit the project website to review the complete project.

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Oogst 1000 Wonderland combines a farm, restaurant, hotel and amusement park for 1,000 visitors a day. All food for the restaurant comes from the central structure and directly adjacent fields. Oogst 1000 combines fun with usefulness.

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One can see this amusement park as a huge people processor, people enter with an empty belly and leave with a full belly, and this without taking or adding anything from the earth, and having fun all along the proces.

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The hotel guests are the farmers, when you work, you can stay for free. And the concept displays some sharp edges, such as the abatoire right below the restaurant. Every fairy tail has it’s darker side.

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Original Dutch farm buildings have been implemented but the traditional layout of the farm has been completely re-arranged.

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Everything is linked by high-end agricultural technologies such as a bioreactor, a heat management system, CO2 recycling etc… the whole forming an as self-sustainable possible system.

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The complex also has a didactic function giving insights into new agricultural developments and explaining them to visitors.

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Special detail: Oogst 1000 Wonderland restaurant toilets are also linked to the bio-gas energy system, so Oogst 1000 offers the worlds first toilets where you actually get paid Euro 0.50- per visit.

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Oogst 100 Community by Tjep.

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Here is the second of three proposals by Dutch designers Tjep. for self-sufficient farms – this time aiming to to house and provide food for up to 100 people within a diametre of 400 metres. (more…)

Oogst 1 Solo by Tjep.

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Here is the first of three proposals by Dutch designers Tjep. for self-sufficient farms that provide inhabitants with everything they require, including energy, heat, oxygen, food and waste management. (more…)

Chulha by Philips Design

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Chulha, a cooking stove intended for use in the developing world by Philips Design, is among the winners of the Index Awards 2009, which were announced in Copenhagen last night. (more…)

Index Award winners

Dezeenwire: the winners of Index Awards, the biannual global design prize that rewards designs that improve life, were announced in Copenhagen last night. Winners in the five categories (body, home, work, play and community) each earn €100,000. www.indexaward.dk

Masdar City Centre by LAVA

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Laboratory for Visionary Architecture (LAVA) have won a competition to design the urban centre of Masdar, a zero-carbon, zero-waste city to be built in the desert near Abu Dhabi. (more…)

Animal Wall by Gitta Gschwendtner

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London designer Gitta Gschwendtner has completed a wall that incorporates 1,000 nest boxes for birds and bats in Cardiff Bay, UK. (more…)

Bow-Wow Stool by Morten Emil Engel

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Copenhagen architect Morten Emil Engel has won a competition to design stools that will furnish an exhibition building by Japanese architects Atelier Bow-Wow at the Krabbesholm Højskole in Skive, Denmark. (more…)

nature’s room

Respecting nature, which we all make part of, will be our great achievement in the future. We must understand it and integrate it into our everyday li..