Central Business District at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas

Dutch firm MVRDV has won a design competition for a new business district in Shanghai, which is already under construction near the city’s Hongqiao Airport.

Central Business District at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas

MVRDV‘s masterplan covers a 4.5 hectare site at the intersection of Shenhai Express Way and Shenbin Road. Straddling two sides of the junction, the new Central Business District will comprise a large southern plot and a smaller northern plot, which together will accommodate ten office towers and an underground shopping centre designed by architecture firm Aedas.

Central Business District at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas

Sunken plazas are proposed for both sites, creating pedestrian zones that are sheltered from the busy roads. Wide stairs will be added to create informal seating areas, plus the larger of the two plazas will be surrounded by the windows of the new shopping centre.

Central Business District at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas

Entrances to the shopping centre will also be added at ground level in the form of two giant glass cubes.

Central Business District at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas

Nine of the office buildings will be located on the southern plot. Each will be between five and nine storeys in height and will feature rounded edges to create streamlined shapes.

Central Business District at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas

The tenth office block is planned for the northern plot and is conceived as a cluster of four connected towers that the architects describe as “flower shaped”. A series of cultural facilities will be housed in the lowest floors of this building.

Central Business District at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas

MVRDV will use indigenous plants to give every building a green roof, while the flower building will feature a rooftop jogging track.

The Central Business District is set to complete in 2015.

Other recent masterplans by MVRDV include a square-shaped peninsula in the Dutch city of Almere and a district beside a motorway in the French town of Villeneuve d’Ascq. See more architecture by MVRDV.

Here are more details from the architects:


MVRDV start construction of business district at Shanghai Hongqiao Airport after winning competition

Sincere Property, MVRDV and Aedas have started construction on a Central Business District at Shanghai’s mostly domestic airport Hongqiao. The 4.5ha site is located near Hongqiao Airport train station at the corner of Shenhai Express Way and Shenbin Road. The plan comprises ten office towers, an underground shopping centre, cultural program, parking and a sunken plaza which will bring a more intimate form of urban life into an area currently dominated by large boulevards and urban expressways. The project’s completion is planned for 2015.

Just weeks after winning the competition, construction has already started on this urban masterplan for an office and retail centre near the fourth busiest airport in mainland China. The 4.5ha site is divided into a small northern plot of 8,409 m2 and a larger southern plot. The team won the competition with highly energy-efficient architecture combined with an intimate urban plan which allows for pedestrian-friendly spaces.

The 110,000m2 offices are divided into ten towers in total: nine office towers on the southern plot ranging from five to nine floors, facilitating rental to different sized companies. The towers are flexibly designed to contain one or more companies. On the northern plot, the tops of four towers will merge into one building, forming a flower shaped landmark of four floors, cantilevered high above the ground.

The 47,000m2 retail space will be located partly on the ground floor and partly along a sunken plaza sheltered from vehicle traffic. Two glass cubes mark the entrances to the shopping centre and are part of the neighbourhood’s pedestrian route, which meanders through the site. The shopping centre is designed by Aedas. On both plots a spacious sunken plaza features wide stairs that can be used as seating, allowing cultural events to be hosted on the site.

Facade area has been minimized by introducing round cornered towers which, together with the continuous 50,5% transparency stone façade, leads to an efficient energy consumption. The façade presents a subtle shifted grid with a delicate bamboo forest reference. The self shading shape of the flower building has lead to a façade with smaller openings on the upper floors for efficient energy consumption. Hidden hatches next to the windows allow for natural ventilation.

The ground floor of the flower building is reserved for 1.790 m2 of cultural program. A 55.000m2 parking garage is located underneath the shopping centre.

The Hongqiao CBD will reach three stars, the highest ranking of the Chinese ‘Green Building Label’. Sustainable building features that will be used include high performance insulation, optimised building forms, shaded spaces, natural ventilation, rainwater collection, permeable road surfaces, links to public transport and a reduction in the urban heat island effect. Nine office towers will feature green roofs growing local plant species and the flower building will offer a sky garden with a continuous jogging path.

MVRDV was selected from a competition with 3 competitors to design the business park. The shopping centre is designed by Aedas. Completion is planned for 2015.

In 2003 MVRDV realised the successful Unterföhring. Park Village office campus near Munich in which urban intimacy was introduced into a large, business park environment.

The post Central Business District at Shanghai
Hongqiao Airport by MVRDV with Aedas
appeared first on Dezeen.

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

3Gatti Architecture Studio will add a facade of opening and closing steel umbrellas to Foreign Office Architects’ Madrid Pavilion from the 2010 Shanghai Expo (+ slideshow).

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

The new cladding will replace bamboo louvres that currently surround the glazed walls of the building, which was originally designed by the former London studio to accommodate an exhibition about low-cost housing for the six-month-long world fair.

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

The pavilion was converted into a retail and office complex once the Expo was over, but two years on the bamboo had started to rot and the steel frames were showing signs of rust, so the owners asked 3Gatti Architecture Studio of Rome and Shanghai to come up with a new design.

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

3Gatti has developed a facade of parasol-like screens that each fold open from a spring-loaded central joint. “We came up with this idea because on sunny days here, Shanghai is full of people with umbrellas,” chief architect Francesco Gatti told Dezeen. “Here they are very common objects used for sun shading.”

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

Just like with the existing bamboo shutters, occupants will be able to adjust the shades to control the light levels within the building. “The previous design of the Madrid Pavilion was a system controlled by the users moving the folding shades horizontally,” Gatti added. “We just changed the shades into a more familiar object.”

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio

The architects will use perforated Corten steel to create the surface of each umbrella, as well as the panels in between. The ground floor elevations will be glazed to allow more visibility into the shops at this level.

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio
Concept diagram – click for larger image

Francesco Gatti founded 3Gatti Architecture Studio in 2002 and opened his Shanghai office in 2004. Other projects in China by the firm include a hotel that looks like a giant set of shelves and an undulating cave-like bar. See more architecture by 3Gatti.

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio
Elevation with open umbrellas

The Madrid Pavilion was one of over 70 pavilions at the Shanghai Expo 2010. See more of the pavilions on Dezeen, including the UK Pavilion designed by Thomas Heatherwick.

Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion by 3Gatti Architecture Studio
Elevation with closed umbrellas

Here’s a project description from 3Gatti Architecture Studio:


Umbrella Facade – new facade for the ex Madrid Pavilion in the Shanghai Expo site.

After the 2010 Shanghai expo the Madrid pavilion needed to be renovated and transformed into a commercial building with retail and office functions. The old facade was built around a 1.5m wide terrace all around the building with bamboo louvers mounted on folding steel frames. In 2012 the bamboo got rotten and the frames rusted so the Shanghai Expo Bureau decided to replace the old bamboo skin with a new facade that could work in the same way: allow the people to open or close the shades so to protect glass facade from the sun in summer and allow more light in during the winter. We were commissioned to find an eye-catching concept that can follow those functions but also attract more people in the new commercial area.

If you visit China one of the first surprise you will find is that most of the women protect themselves from the sun using umbrellas and when actually rains most of the time they don’t mind to get wet without any protection. So when they asked us to protect a building in China from the sun this idea came up spontaneously: an umbrella facade.

The idea was to make each umbrella able to be controlled by a pulley to allow people to interact with it. Apart from the pulley the rest of the mechanism is identical to the one of the umbrella with the only difference that the mechanical parts are made of stainless steel, the frames of aluminum and the external surface of thin corten.

When the umbrellas are fully opened the facade is completely flat so that most of the sunlight and strong wind is blocked. If the umbrellas are opened the light is able to come fully inside and the umbrella sticks become attractive star-sticks with an aerodynamic shape not resistant to the wind preventing structural tensions in case of typhoons.

Architecture firm: 3GATTI
Chief architect: Francesco Gatti
Project manager: Bogdan Chipara
Collaborators: Alessandro Paladin, Jennifer Yong, Zara Wang, Yichen Wang

Client: Shanghai World Expo (Group) Co., ltd.
Location: UBPA , Shanghai Expo area
Programme: Replace the old bamboo-louvers façade with a new facade.
Area: 1330 m²
Design period: November 2012
Construction period: Autumn 2014
Materials: Corten, aluminum and stainless steel

The post Umbrella Facade for the Madrid Pavilion
by 3Gatti Architecture Studio
appeared first on Dezeen.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Chinese studio Archi-Union has converted an office block in Shanghai into an art gallery with a concrete staircase twisting through its middle (+ slideshow).

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

The facade of the building remains unchanged but the interior spaces are entirely renovated to accommodate two exhibition galleries and a bar, with a glazed atrium sandwiched between.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Made up of six components, the contorted concrete staircase creates a spiralling route through the three split-level floors, while additional corridors cut across at different levels.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

“Faced with the change in the use of the building, we first deconstruct the straightforward logic of the space and blur the functions’ interface,” says Archi-Union.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

“The complex logic of the staircase form breaks the traditional two dimensional layer relations, but it’s not an arbitrary treatment out of control,” add the architects. “Every perceived line has its logical necessity; but the curving surface softens this logic, it gives the visitor a feeling between rationale and randomness, creates an exciting spatial feeling at the edge of conflicting ideas.”

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

A permanent exhibition occupies the ground floor gallery and is dispersed between a collection of rectilinear space dividers. A second gallery for special exhibitions sits directly above, but is instead sectioned off by undulating surfaces.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Recesses in these new volumes provide display areas for artworks, while a doorway in the first floor gallery leads through to a small seating area referred to as “the teahouse”.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

A smaller exhibition room is also located on the first floor, while the floor above contains a meditation room, a study room and a staff kitchen and dining room.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Archi-Union is a Shanghai-based studio led by Philip F. Yuan. The studio previously created a similar concrete staircase in the Tea House library, which was one of our most popular stories of 2012. Another recent project is the Lan Xi Curtilage restaurant and members’ club in Chengdu.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

See more recent architecture in China, including a new mixed-use complex by architect Steven Holl.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Photography is by Xia Zhi.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Here’s the full project description from Archi-Union:


Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Located in the high-density Xuhui District, in downtown Shanghai, Jade Museum is a renovation from an office building. For this project we were commissioned to convert the noncomplex office space into a multi-functional communication art museum on the premise of keeping the original building structure. Faced with the change in the use of the building, we first deconstruct the straightforward logic of the space and blur the functions’ interface. We implement the tools of digital design early in the conceptual phase, to help us rebuild the logic of space and translate the folding of the circulation flows into a folding of space itself.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Different layers of functions are organized around the main circulation space, facing the central courtyard. The simple single-layer mode was redefined with the introduction of a non-linear space. The simple vertical and horizontal circulation movements influence each other in the inserted space, the blur of the interface and boundaries make the space fold and integrated. The circulation flow adapts itself to this incision in the body of space. The antithesis between sloping and balance, continuity and boundary turns the simple coexistence of elements into a discussion of geometry. The complex logic of the staircase form breaks the traditional two dimensional layer relations, but it’s not an arbitrary treatment out of control: steps, door openings, handrails, beams and roof are distinguished components of the building structure that have a delicate and reasonable interconnecting relation. Every perceived line has its logical necessity; but the curving surface softens this logic, it gives the visitor a feeling between rationale and randomness, creates an exciting spatial feeling at the edge of conflicting ideas.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

The folding of circulation lines and the twisted form of the inserted space create an entrance on the first floor, which faces the central courtyard. The permanent exhibition hall is located in front of the entrance. Via the stairs near the exhibition hall, one reaches the VIP exhibition space. The curving walls divide space into several micro spaces and also guide the visitors’ flow. The artworks are placed into the curving walls. Resting and communication space peer from behind these walls. In front of the VIP exhibition space is the teahouse, which is connected to the outdoors terrace.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image and key

Digital fabrication, as a methodology, is implemented throughout the design and construction process. Non-linear form and geometrical decomposition lie in the core of fabrication. The abstract multi-dimensional surface generated by the computer is decomposed into workable and controllable CNC panels; their exact position controls the 3D assembly. The curving form is transferred into linear machine logic closely following the geometrical principles. The three-dimensional space that the traditional two-dimensional drawings cannot express is eloquently expressed through the fabrication logic. This combination of digital lofting and CNC fabrication reduced the construction budget and at the same time improved construction quality and speed without compromising the design integrity.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image and key

In addition to geometry and fabrication, light, as a third key-element in design coordinates with the folding, irregular spatial module and the flowing exhibition hall design to enhance this multi-dimensional experience.

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Above: second floor plan – click above for larger image and key

Project Name: Jade Museum
Location: Xuhui District, Shanghai
Area: approx 1000 sqm
Design/Completion: 2012/2013
Client: Jade Museum
Architect: Philip F. Yuan / Archi-Union Architects
Design Team: Alex Han, Fuzi He

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Above: ground floor axonometric – click above for larger image

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Above: first floor axonometric – click above for larger image

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Above: staircase concept diagram and plans – click above for larger image

Jade Museum by Archi-Union

Above: staircase sections – click above for larger image

The post Jade Museum
by Archi-Union
appeared first on Dezeen.

Tony’s Farm by Playze

Berlin and Shanghai-based studio Playze stacked up perforated shipping containers to create offices for an organic farm in Shanghai, China (+ slideshow).

Tony's Farm by Playze

Tony’s Farm, the biggest organic fruit and vegetable farm in Shanghai, asked Playze to develop a main reception, lobby and VIP area as well as offices alongside the existing factory.

Tony's Farm by Playze

The architects cut open one side of the factory – the white building seen in the photographs – and filled one end of the space with shipping containers, inside which are labs and offices.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Containers were chosen for their strength as well as their sustainability, being “a metaphor for recycled space”, as the architects explained. Local bamboo was also used for indoor and outdoor flooring.

Tony's Farm by Playze

The entrance, located underneath three cantilevered containers, leads through to a triple-height lobby created by stacking up containers and removing the walls between them.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Visitors then enter an inner courtyard, which references traditional Chinese courtyards and is partly covered by the terrace above.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Bridges on the upper floor connect the offices in the outer cluster of containers to those inside the factory.

Tony's Farm by Playze

There are also plans to build hotel rooms across the farm to host eco-tourists and guests. “It was part of the design to imagine the connection between this core building and the hotel rooms that will be built,” says architect Didier Callot. “The client is still working on this hotel project.”

Tony's Farm by Playze

Playze was founded in 2007 and is based in both Berlin and Shanghai, aiming to bring German design standards to China’s large-scale, fast-paced projects as well as working on smaller-scale urban projects in Europe, according to Callot.

Tony's Farm by Playze

We’ve featured lots of shipping container architecture on Dezeen, including temporary homes for victims of the Japanese tsunami and an observatory in South Korea, and we recently reported on news that “problem families” in Amsterdam are to be moved to shipping containers on the outskirts of the city.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Other recent stories from China include plans to construct the world’s tallest building in just 90 days and a masterplan for Shenzhen that’s larger than the whole of Manhattan – see all our stories from China.

Tony's Farm by Playze

See all our stories about shipping containers »
See all our stories about Shanghai »
See all our stories about China »

Photographs are by Bartosz Kolonko.

Here’s some more information from the architects:


Context

Tony’s Farm is the biggest organic food farm in Shanghai, which produces OFDC certified (member of IFOAM) vegetables and fruits. But Tony’s Farm is meant to be more than just a place for vegetable production. The vision is to integrate the consumer and therefore promote a natural lifestyle.

Tony's Farm by Playze

To link the activities of the working people with the visitors of the farm, playze developed a building complex, which combines the main reception, a lobby, (working also for the future hotel rooms) and a vip area, with the new offices and an existing warehouse, where the fruits and vegetables are being packed.

The building provides transparency within the manufacturing process. Thus it supports the vision of integrating the visitor and helps to reinforce the consumer confidence in the products of the farm. At the same time the building design is driven by the concept of sustainability, combined with its iconic qualities, it communicates and promotes the core concept of Tony’s Farm.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Spatial concept

The building has been designed as a continuous spatial sequence in order to physically and visually connect various interior and exterior programs. The whole structure demands an exploration by the visitors. It is not obvious how the spatial sequence will develop while crossing the building and the site. A system of terraces functions not only as transitory space but also as extension of the interior work and leisure areas. Outdoor meetings and other activities support the aspiration of the client to literally work surrounded by nature and same time reduce the use of conditioned space.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Throughout the project the immediate spatial relationship between the building and the environment is meant to create a virtual dialogue between the industrial aspects of food production and the surrounding farmland. The massing strategy supports this ambiguity by creating various types of visual relations.

Tony's Farm by Playze

The systemic nature of the containers is countered with the adaptation to the specific situations, like entrance, courtyard, office wing, terraces, etc. The different orientations towards the landscape of the farm, the functional requirements and the spatial sequence are defining each situation of the layout in a specific way, although the spatial framework is the container with its standardized dimensions.

Tony's Farm by Playze

The cubing of the containers follows spatial and climatic demands. The cantilevering gesture marks the main entrance of the site. This is where the visitors enter the structure and find the reception desk. After the lobby, which is accentuated by a 3 stories high volume, they step out to an inner courtyard, where they are picked up by electric cars to be brought to their hotel rooms, distributed throughout the farm.

Tony's Farm by Playze

The second level allows a connection to the office wing of the building via 2 bridges. This part of the building complex is covered by the existing warehouse. The east facade has been sliced, so that the new container offices could find shelter underneath the existing roof and form an new inner facade towards the production hall.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Construction

Since the climatic exigence asked for impermeability and insulation, numerous specific details had to be developed to maintain the stringent appearance of the containers. The elaborate details, for example the still visible steel beams of the containers in the interior, stand in contrast to the rather rough and crude tectonic details of the freight container. Further, the modular system was challenged by the individual joints, resulting from the irregular distribution of the containers.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Above: ground floor plan – click for larger image

The structural logic of the container is the framed box, which can be opened or left closed towards the 6 orientations. These characteristics were amplified in different spatial situations, integrated within the whole structure. At the entrance situation for instance, the additional supporting structure is reduced to a minimum to underline the ”loating; moment of the containers. The 3-storeys-high vertical space is open to 3 sides to dissolve the box. In the courtyard, the terraces form a roof to the underneath and quote the chinese courtyard typology, whereas the office part is developed in the style of a slab and pillar constellation.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image

Sustainability

In order to cope with the high aspirations of the client regarding the protection of the environment, several strategies have been used to reduce the energy consumption of the building. The entire structure is well insulated, even though the containers appear in its raw form. The original container doors have been perforated and serve as external shading blinds at the sun exposed facades to minimize solar heat gain. A geothermal heat pump delivers energy for the air conditioning and floor heating systems. Controlled ventilation helps to optimize air exchange rates and therefore to minimize the energy loss through uncontrolled aeration. The use of LED lighting reduces the general electricity consumption.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Above: section 1 – click above for larger image

Another ambition of the project is to reduce the energy hidden in construction materials, the so called grey energy. Therefore recycled, ecologically sustainable, fast growing or at least recyclable materials have been used. The re-use of freight containers seemed adequate, first for its inherent structural autarky and second for being a common metaphor for „recycled space“. Further, the minimal weight of the container structure allowed to re-use the existing foundation plate. The use of local bamboo products for indoor and outdoor flooring, as well as all the built-in furniture additionally supports the ambition of constructing a truly sustainable building.

Tony's Farm by Playze

Above: section 2 – click above for larger image

Project data

Client: Tony’s Farm
Location: Shanghai, China
Completed in: July 2011
Built area: 1060m2
Number of containers: 78
Team: Mengjia He, Pascal Berger, Marc Schmit, Meijun wu, Liv Xu Ye, Ahmed Hosny, Andres Tovar, Maggie Tang

The post Tony’s Farm
by Playze
appeared first on Dezeen.

“The western media likes to portray China as this big behemoth” – Neri&Hu

Interest in conservation and small scale development is growing in China, according to Shanghai architects Lyndon Neri and Rossana Hu, whose conversion of a former colonial police station opened in the city this month (+ movie).

The Design Republic Commune, designed by Neri&Hu, contains a new flagship store for the architects’ design retail brand Design Republic, as well as a centre for exhibitions and events.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Neri explains how restoration projects like this are common in the west, but that in China you are more likely to find entirely new interiors within historic buildings, which he describes as a “bling-bling experience”. However, he insists that interest in conservation is growing.

“The western media likes to portray China as this big behemoth, bigger, better, richer, crasser version of America,” Neri says. “[But] you would be surprised. Because there is actually a group of people that are interested – even in the government, even in the business sector, even in the banking sector – in the small, the delicate, the things with meaning and purpose.”

This aspect of China has not been highlighted, he adds, “because it doesn’t sell newspapers”.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

The Design Republic Commune features a restored exterior while the interior retains traces of its previous incarnations in the form of sections of exposed beams, brickwork, plaster and timber laths as well as salvaged signage. ”I think it’s very important for people who come into a historic building to have certain pieces of reality, to be able to touch the inside of the building,” adds Hu.

See more images of the Design Republic Commune in our earlier story, or read our interview with the architects about how Chinese architects need to develop their own design manifesto.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

See all our recent stories about Shanghai »
See more stories about Neri&Hu »

Photography is by Pedro Pegenaute.

The post “The western media likes to portray China
as this big behemoth” – Neri&Hu
appeared first on Dezeen.

“Architects in China are lost” – Neri&Hu

"Architects in China are lost"

News: Chinese architects need to develop their own design manifesto to stem the tide of “half-assed” building projects in the country, according to Lyndon Neri and Rossana Hu of Shanghai studio Neri&Hu.

Speaking to Dezeen in Shanghai last week, the duo talked about “the absence of a modern Chinese architecture and design language” and added: “Architects feel lost”.

Neri and Hu made the comments at the opening of their Design Republic Design Commune in the city’s Jingan district, where they organised a series of discussions about the need for a new design manifesto for China.

Hu said the loss of belief is common to architects around the world, but is particularly critical in China due to the frenetic pace of development in the country. “A lot of architects in the US are lost, but there are no projects,” Hu said. “Here, we are lost and we are building cities.”

Neri added that Chinese developers often brief their construction teams by pointing to pictures in magazines: “It’s done in such a half-assed way that it becomes scary,” he said.

Last week Neri&Hu Design and Research Office invited international designers, architects and founders of design brands to Shanghai to discuss their own design manifestos at the opening of the building, which will be used to introduce Chinese audiences to design.

At the launch they distributed a booklet resembling Chairman Mao’s Little Red Book containing a series of slogans such as “We seek beauty in the everyday” and “We denounce design for the sake of design, “which intended to stimulate debate about the meaning of design.

“If you tell people this kind of stuff here, they don’t understand why you’re even doing it,” said Hu. “In the west, when you tell people about this, at least they understand why you’re searching. They might be lost, but they know that they are lost. People are lost here, not knowing they’re lost. That’s a real danger.”

Last month Aric Chen, the creative director of Beijing Design Week, told Dezeen that China needs to “slow down” and pay more attention to issues of authenticity, process and identity.

See all our stories about Neri&Hu | See all our stories about Shanghai

Top photograph of the Shanghai skyline is from Shutterstock.

Here’s an edited transcript of the interview with Lyndon Neri and Rossana Hu, conducted by Dezeen editor-in-chief Marcus Fairs:


Rossana Hu: Lyndon and I are both architects but after we started our architecture practice here in Shanghai we also started another company called Design Republic. Design Republic is really a platform for design. We started with a retail concept but there are other things with regards to Design Republic that we’d like to incorporate into the retail environment.

One of them is education: educating the public about design, to bring designers from different parts of the world to China, to speak, to show their work, to engage with dialogue with the local designers here.

Lyndon Neri: The idea is to bring the best of what the world can offer to China. And hopefully, one day, our aspiration is to bring the best of what China can offer from a design point of view back to the world.

Rossana Hu: This week at the Design Republic Design Commune we are opening the space to the public and we’re having a two-day symposium series called Manifesto. We’ve invited a lot of guest speakers from all over the world to come and talk about design in different ways.

If we don’t do this, and we only show and sell products, it’s just meaningless. And vice-versa, if we only do the talks, and you read about these products but you don’t see them, you don’t touch them, that’s also meaningless. And that was the case [in Shanghai] before Design Republic opened. You couldn’t see classic modern design anywhere. There were no design museums, there were no shops that sell modern classics. People were just not interested.

Lyndon Neri: The idea of Manifesto started about actually seven years ago when Rossana and I edited a book called Persistence of Vision. We interviewed fifty architects practicing in Shanghai. We asked them twelve questions.

At the back of our mind was the notion of trying to find a manifesto in a city that is so busy; a city that is just building like mad. We realised that it was important to make sure that people are thinking, having a discourse.

Rosanna Hu: It all derived from when we first started working here. We were talking to both local and overseas Chinese who returned about working, the conditions of working here, and everyone’s so busy and has no time to think, no time to talk to each other. And every time you do have time to talk, it’s five to ten minutes, and you can never really engage in a meaningful way. And we thought, okay, if everyone feels that way, then that means everyone must welcome the chance to engage.

So we did the book as an effort to bring about community, and it did I think. It made all the people we interviewed rethink about why it is they’re here. We asked a lot of questions about culture, space, location, your work; what your responsibility as an architect and designer is; are you happy with what you’re doing here; those types of questions.

So we wanted Design Republic to be a platform, and the retail just became the easiest thing to start because the form of a shop is easy. It is something that people understand: you sell products.

But there are other things that we wanted to do: create a brand that incorporates other designers in China to bring about a Chinese voice in modern design; to be able to bring it to the world and to engage in the problems that exist here today.

Marcus Fairs: And how does that relate to what you’re doing here? A lot of the speakers you have for your Manifesto talks here are from the West.

Rosanna Hu: From the book project we realised a lot of people were asking what today’s manifesto in design is. And actually that’s not just a Chinese problem; it’s a global problem. Architects feel lost, we’re no longer confined within architecture with the big A, the way I thought we were say fifteen years ago, twenty years ago. It was probably easier to design because everyone shared certain beliefs. We believe in manifestos, we believe that you need to stake your belief. If you know your dream, then you can chase after it.

Lyndon Neri: And be rigorous about it.

Rosanna Hu: And also we notice the absence of a collective voice. The absence of a modern Chinese architecture and design language.

Lyndon Neri: In China, the phenomenon of copying is very great. So people look at magazines and they go, “I could sort of do this minimalist thing, I’ll have the contractor do something like this.” It’s done in such a mama huhu way; a half-assed, half-baked way that it becomes, you know, scary.

Marcus Fairs: Shanghai’s quite funny to that extent because you have these western-style skyscrapers with Chinese details bolted on the top. It’s quite surreal.

Rosanna Hu: Yes, and I mean it goes back to our thesis projects in graduate school. I remember having a discussion with my teacher at Princeton. I remember talking to him about my thesis proposal, discussing the problem of modernism, and regionalism versus globalism. He thought that to modernise means basically what Rem [Koolhaas] believes: the tabula rasa. There’s no history; that’s all baggage that you don’t need. But I still insist that you are who you are. None of us can erase our past, and you bring the baggage with you and you’ve got to work with the baggage that you have.

And how do you then exist as a contemporary architect, working with a modern architectural language? How do you exist in this environment, what is it that we take with us? Maybe it’s not our history from the Ming and Qing Dynasties or even earlier. Maybe it’s what we see today. Maybe it’s the toilet that’s across your nongtang [traditional Shanghai lane-house] window that you can see from your neighbour’s bathroom, or it’s the broom that everyone hangs up. Maybe it’s those very kind of mundane things of the everyday that gives you a clue to what to design.

But also, we recognise that we’re only one part of the world, and we’re only one very small part of the larger Chinese modern context. I like to learn from other disciplines, and I think that to learn from, say, how Chinese modern literature, Chinese modern art, Chinese modern music, has evolved to where they are today.

The modern [Chinese] language, the writing system is actually influenced from English writing; the same with poetry. People have gone abroad, studied and brought things back. You know if you look at the [Chinese architects] who are doing significant work here, very few of them have actually never done work abroad: Yung Ho [Chang] Ma [Qingyun], Ma Qingyun, Ma Yansong. Most of use went abroad, and now we are all back here, taking what we’ve learned and creating something new.

Lyndon Neri: [Vancouver-based architect and designer] Omer Arbel said something very interesting today when he was asked what he would say to Chinese architecture students. He says, growing up, it was easy to model his career on the protagonists of his time. In his case it was Rem Koolhaas. But then quickly he realised it was not just unattainable, but it was so abstract that to people in Vancouver it was meaningless. So then he started finding meaning within the context that he was practising, and that became interesting.

Marcus Fairs: You mentioned that these are global issues; to what extent are they issues in China too?

Rosanna Hu: It is even more of an issue here because more people are working here, and it’s at a faster pace.

Lyndon Neri: It’s amplified, exaggerated.

Rosanna Hu: So if you get lost, you get lost faster. And if you fall, you fall deeper.

Lyndon Neri: A lot of architects in the US are lost, but there are no projects. So they could be lost and not build. Here, we are lost and we are building cities. We’re building cities, you know. For crying out loud!

Rosanna Hu: If you tell people this kind of stuff here, they don’t understand why you’re even doing it. They don’t understand the need to have a manifesto. In the west, when you tell people about this, at least they understand why you’re searching. They may not have it, they might be lost, but they know that they are lost. People are lost here, not knowing they’re lost. That’s a real danger.

Marcus Fairs: So the manifesto needs to be figured out pretty soon. And how are you going to do that?

Rosanna Hu: I don’t really see that there needs to be an end. I don’t think it’s like saying, “Okay, once we formulate our manifesto, then this is it.”

"Architects in China are lost"

Marcus Fairs: You produced a little Manifesto booklet for the opening event [above and below].

"Architects in China are lost"

Rosanna Hu: We really worked hard [on that]. We really thought about it and the reason why it’s mostly blank pages is so that you write your own. And then they’re offset with quotes from both Chinese writers, poets and Western writers’ quotes about life, about ideals, about utopia. This helps you set the tone. It’s the beginning but the key is that you’re searching for something, and that your work will hopefully stand for something.

"Architects in China are lost"

The post “Architects in China are lost”
– Neri&Hu
appeared first on Dezeen.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

Architecture and design studio HRC Design Works has transformed an ageing warehouse beside the HuangPu River in Shanghai into a leisure and shopping destination with a plant-covered cafe and a cave-like shoe store.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

Sotto Sotto is positioned beside the old dock in the South Bund district and HRC Design Works designed the building as an attraction that would bring new visitors to the area whilst respecting the history of the converted building.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

The architects used raw materials such as stone, copper and unfinished wood to make connections with nature in each space, as well as to respect the existing structure. “We’d rather have pure original structure than style,” they explain.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

The new spaces include shops, cafes and wine bars, as well as a cigar lounge and reception area.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

HRC Design Works founded their studio in Singapore, but moved back to Shanghai in 2009. “There is a crowd of people in China who have resided and studied abroad for several years, but are now coming back to the mainland to realise their dreams,” explain the designers.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

The South Bund district is also home to The Waterhouse, a boutique hotel in a disused army headquarters, which was named best interiors project at the Inside awards in 2011.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

Last week Dezeen visited Shanghai to take part in a series of discussions about architecture and design in China. See the snapshots from our trip on Facebook, or read about Neri&Hu’s new Shanghai design centre in our earlier story.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

While we were there, Hong Kong-based designer Michael Young also tipped China to have as many world-class designers as Japan within 20 years.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

See all our stories about Shanghai »
See all our stories about China »

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

Photography is by Peter Dixie.

Here’s some more information from HRC Design Works:


Sotto Sotto, which in an ancient warehouse, is located along the HuangPu River. It is also called Old Dock. The long history was consisted of the conceptions from ShiLiuPu, Li HongZhang, Titain QingBang, Huang JingRong, DuYueSheng and MinSheng Company. Here used to be the most prosperous port in Shanghai. And now, we choose here to let people enjoy a new life style and shopping experience.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

Here to collect for luxury shops, café, red wine and cigar. Combined with arts auctions and original home furnishing brands, we are also advocating a brand new shopping experience and relaxation area. When you go through the shopping area and come to the cafes, have a taste of the coffee, enjoying the view of the ships, letting the wind blowing hair, having free rein to your imagination. How luxury it is to have such a wonderful time in the afternoon, which is popular with those people who have high demand of lifestyle.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

In this ancient warehouse, we design it on the basis of respect and protection. Combining the recognition and history with the new environment, we always make every effort to make city architecture readable. As far as the ancient city architecture is concerned, designers think it should be readable as literature. It’s quite important that people can read its history and rich charm. Therefore, we’d rather have pure original structure than style. Here is the perfect place for you to relax from the fast pace of the city life. Under relaxing shopping atmosphere, you can look back from the past to present and future. All things here is the memory, the memory of the ancient architecture, the memory the people in this generation. The ancient wood, the sheet cooper, the bearing wood are reminding people to find themselves in this poetical space and learn a new life style through their new personal experience.

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

Project: The Bund SOTTO SOTTO
Location: Shanghai
Owner: Private
Design Studio: HRC DESIGN WORKS PTE.LTD.(Singapore)
Designer: Fei Liu
Area: 1400 Sq.m.
Material: Marble, Stainless Steel, Wood Board
End Time: Aug. 6 2012

Sotto Sotto by HRC Design Works

Above: floor plan – click above for larger image

The post Sotto Sotto by
HRC Design Works
appeared first on Dezeen.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Architecture studio Neri&Hu has opened a design gallery, shop and event space in a former colonial police station in Shanghai’s Jingan district.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Named Design Commune, the renovated brick building houses a series of design stores and showrooms, including the new flagship for Neri&Hu‘s own furniture brand, Design Republic.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

“The concept for the Design Commune is to bring designers from around the city to hopefully have a place where they can have a discourse in architecture, in product design, in interior design,” Lyndon Neri told Dezeen. “To have a place where they could shop, a place where they could rest, a place where they could meander and wander and see different shops and different stores, different products, and at the same time be a part of an exhibition, or be part of a gallery, or be part of a talk.”

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

The architects hope the spaces will be able to showcase the vibrancy of China’s growing design scene. ”We want to bring the best of what the world can offer to China and hopefully one day bring the best of what China can offer back to the world,” said Neri.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

For the conversion, the architects peeled back the decaying layers of wood and plaster, before restoring the original brickwork and adding new walls and rooms using a materials palette of glass, metal sheeting and white plaster.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

“The existing building has a heaviness, and a kind of institutional feel,” explained Rossana Hu, before describing how they wanted to offset this with lighter materials. “Big open glass lets you see through a lot of visual corridors, or openings between floors that didn’t used to exist.”

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

A new glass structure runs along the facade of the building, creating a modern shopfront for Design Republic.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Elsewhere in the building, the architects have created a restaurant, a cafe, a lecture hall and a one-room hotel.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Dezeen visited the The Design Republic Commune last week to take part in a series of discussions about architecture and design in China and you can see our snapshots in an album on Facebook. We’ll also be publishing a full movie interview with Neri&Hu soon and you can also read about another Design Republic showroom in Shanghai in our earlier story.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

During our visit, Hong Kong-based designer Michael Young also tipped China to have as many world-class designers as Japan within 20 years.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

See more stories about Neri&Hu »
See more stories about Shanghai »

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Photography is by Pedro Pegenaute.

Here’s a project description from Neri&Hu:


The Design Republic Commune (Shanghai)

The Design Republic Commune, located in the center of Shanghai, envisions itself as a design hub, a gathering space for designers and design patrons alike to admire, ponder, exchange, learn, and consume. It houses the new flagship store for Design Republic, a modern furniture retailer, alongside a mixture of design-focused retail concepts, including books, fashion, lighting, accessories and flowers. The Commune will also have a design gallery, an event space, a café, a restaurant by Michelin-Starred Chef Jason Atherton, and a one-bedroom Design Republic apartment.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Situated within the historic relic of the Police Headquarters built by the British in the 1910s, the project takes a surgical approach to renovation. First, gently removing the decaying wood and plaster, then carefully restoring the still vibrant red brickwork, while grafting on skin, joints, and organs onto parts that needed reconstruction. And finally with the attachment of a brand new appendage which, like a prosthetic, enables the existing building to perform new functions, the nearly abandoned building begins its life again.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Replacing the rather dilapidated row-shops on the street front, Neri&Hu introduced a modern glassy insertion onto the brick façade. To accentuate the historic nature of the main building, the street level periphery is enveloped by transparent glazing to reveal the existing brickwork and rough concrete structures. Breathing new life into a traditional colonial building plan, Neri&Hu strategically removed certain floor plates, walls, as well as ceiling panels, to allow a renewed experience of the existing building, one that is fitting for the new functions to which the building now needs to respond.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Various small and precise incisions have been made in the interior architecture to reveal the building’s history and integrity while creating experiential intersections for a coherent experience when moving through the building. Contrasting with the exterior which has mostly been left intact due to historic preservation guidelines, the interior has been completely transformed. The starkly modern white rooms are juxtaposed with untouched remnants of brick walls, and in some cases, exposed wood laths underneath crumbling plaster walls. The clear intentionality behind the detailing of connections between the old and the new creates a visually and spatially tectonic balance in relation to the building as a whole.

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Above: ground floor plan – click above for larger image and key

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Above: first floor plan – click above for larger image and key

The Design Republic Commune by Neri&Hu

Above: second floor plan – click above for larger image and key

The post The Design Republic Commune
by Neri&Hu
appeared first on Dezeen.

“China is a dream scenario for a designer” – Michael Young

“China is a dream scenario for a designer” – Michael Young

News: China will produce as many world-class designers as Japan within 20 years, according to Hong Kong-based industrial designer Michael Young.

“In 20 years time, Shanghai is going to be like Tokyo,” the British-born designer said. “When I [first] went to Tokyo 20 years ago, Japan was still classified as a country that was copying design and doing poor-quality products. Now it’s got some of the greatest designers in the world. I think it will be the same for China.”

Speaking to Dezeen in Shanghai last week, Young said the country’s combination of world-class engineering capabilities and a new generation of home-grown, style-conscious industrialists meant that it was rapidly shaking off its reputation for poor quality manufacturing and copying.

“There’s more investment opportunity than anywhere else in the universe,” Young said. “Then you’ve got Shenzhen and Guangzhou just over the border [from Hong Kong], so you’ve got the biggest manufacturing base. So you put those two together and you’re in a dream scenario for a designer.”

Young relocated to Hong Kong seven years ago to take advantage of the booming Chinese economy and its mass-production facilities. He said foreign-educated Chinese were returning to the country to take over family engineering firms and pushing design up the agenda.

“A lot of families who’ve got large manufacturing bases want to do something cool,” he said. “I’m working with a lot of younger generation families; people who’ve been to New York and studied and come back here to open a factory. They don’t want to make screw-tips for aerials in their factories; they want to make things like Bluetooth wireless technology products.”

Young made the comments in an interview with Dezeen at the opening of Design Republic Design Commune, a new design gallery, store and event space located in a converted former colonial police station in Shanghai’s Jingan district. The building is designed and owned by Shanghai architects Neri&Hu Design and Research Office.  The architects invited a group of leading international designers, brands and media, including Young and Dezeen, to take part in a series of discussions about architecture and design in China.

Born in 1966, Young graduated from Kingston University in 1992 and ran studios in London, Reykjavík and Brussels before moving to Hong Kong in 2006. Recent products designed by Young include a revamp of the classic Mini Moke and the best-selling Hacker watch.

Young also praised China for having “some of the best engineering facilities in the world” and said fears about copying in China were overstated. “What I find really annoying is the misconception about copying in China,” he said. “Of course everywhere in the world has copying as much as China. If you consider the number of factories here, the volume of output here, it’s a very small percentage of what’s actually going on. I find the investment in innovation higher than anywhere else in the world.”

Chinese factories were willing to tackle complex design problems that European brands would find too difficult, Young said. “For me the level of engineering here allows me to exploit the kinds of ideas that I can’t do in other countries. If I take some of the ideas I’ve got to Europe, people will just look at me and say its too complicated and the door will close immediately. Nothing surpasses the equipment in the factories in China; the level of engineering skills and the quality of production is so high – we all know that from the various computer brands how high the engineering skills can be here.”

See all our stories about Michael Young | See all our stories about Shanghai

The post “China is a dream scenario for a designer”
– Michael Young
appeared first on Dezeen.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

A boxy wooden staircase twists up through the floors of this design store in Shanghai by architects Neri&Hu.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

The architects refurbished an existing building to create the Design Collective store, which houses a series of showrooms including one for their own furniture brand Design Republic.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

A huge steel funnel leads customers into the triple height atrium, where products are displayed within recesses in the walls.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

Design Republic is located on the ground floor beside an exhibition and events space, while eight more showrooms are located on the two upper levels.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

Patterned panels made from carbon fibre cover the building’s entire exterior, transforming its appearance and giving it a new identity.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

See more projects by Neri&Hu here, including the award-winning hotel they designed in a disused army headquarters and our movie interview with them at last year’s Inside awards.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

See all our stories about staircases »

Photography is by Shen Zhonghai.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

Here’s some more information from Neri&Hu:


The new Design Collective is located in the outskirt of Shanghai in a town called Qingpu. Neri&Hu inherited an existing building and was given the task to completely redesign both the exterior and the interior without demolishing the existing structure.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

Neri&Hu’s concept was to cover the existing building to create a new exterior identity and simultaneously fabricate an introverted spatial platform to create a new identity for the Design Collective, a group of avant garde furniture retail initiative in the city.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

The existing building has been completely covered with an opaque graphic wrapper made with carbon fiber panel to create an introverted spatial condition to showcase furniture both visually and experientially.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

The main entry is characterized by a large steel funnel, serving as a transition element from the urban context to the exhibition space.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

The shape of the entry tube also serves as a means of emphasizing the arrival into the 3 story exhibition hall where the visitors introverted journey begins.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

The staircase wrapping the interior of the main exhibition space leads the visitor throughout the multiple levels of display where the furniture can be experienced from varying spatial relationship and viewed form different vantage points and voyeuristic snippets of retail display.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

This journey is accentuated as the visitor climbs higher through the gallery levels by the seven large openings in the roof which serve to allow daylight into the exhibition space while at once generating a moment of visual release from within the introverted exhibition environment.

Design Collective by Neri&Hu

Design Republic Qingpu store is located on the first floor, with a total area of 2,000 sqm. Design Republic offers a unique collection of products created by the world’s best design talents collaborates with many designers both foreign and local to create products that will explore a new modern Chinese aesthetic.

Click above for larger image

Design Republic stands for a new birth of life and style. At its foundation, it is a republic of life – life that creates meaning and understanding through its relationship to objects of habitation. Seeking to explore the relationship between people and the simple objects they use in life – a plate, a teacup, a chair; it is here where we discover the beauty of everyday life.

Click above for larger image

Design Republic is also a republic of style – style that creates new ideologies in design, retail, and merchandising concepts embodying a distinctive aesthetic for contemporary China.

Click above for larger image

It crosses traditional boundaries to merge old and new, traditional and modern, opulent and austere, to ultimately create a dynamic platform of design.

Click above for larger image

The post Design Collective
by Neri&Hu
appeared first on Dezeen.