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Shenzhen: The Latest Architecture and News

2011 AIA Honor Award / Horizontal Skyscraper / Steven Holl Architects

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2011 AIA Honor Award / Horizontal Skyscraper / Steven Holl Architects - Image 2 of 4

There are some buildings that have the power to make one step back and simply enjoy being part of our profession. For us, Steven Holl’s Horizontal Skyscraper does just that. As we’ve been sharing with you, it is a project that gracefully hovers above the Shenzhen landscape, allowing both the ground and the elevated ground plane to be occupied. The project balances the built with the natural as reflecting pools and lush greenery are interspersed with small restaurants and cafes, and as the “sunken cubes” of the main wings of the center – glass volumes offering 360 degree views – strengthen the connection with the landscape.

The building has recently been awarded a 2011 AIA Institute Honor Award for its architectural creativity and contextual thoughtfulness.    The jury commented, “This project skips along from mound to mound and manipulates the landscape – it builds it up and shapes it into a powerful form above the land with inventive manipulation. The building is shading the landscape and letting it breath – integrated sustainability. A reinvented building type with the building floating over the landscape – dancing on the landscape.”

More information, with more photographs from Iwan Baan, after the break.

SBF Tower / Atelier Hollein

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SBF Tower / Atelier Hollein - Image 9 of 4
© Atelier Hollein

Atelier Hollein shared with us their latest project in Shenzhen, China. It’s a high-rise office building for which they received one of first prizes in the 4in1 Tower Competition in 2009. You can see more images and architect’s description after the break.

Horizontal Skyscraper / Steven Holl

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© Iwan Baan

Our friend and architecture photographer, Iwan Baan , just published on his website some of his recently shot images of Steven Holl’s Horizontal Skyscraper in Shenzhen, China . The project is a long mixed-use complex which includes office spaces, apartments, a hotel and even a public landscape. Baan’s photos illustrate Holl’s idea that the “building appears as if it were once floating on a higher sea that has now subsided; leaving the structure propped up high on eight legs.”

Complete photoset at Iwan’s website, more images and more about the project after the break.

Jade Bamboo Culture Plaza / MENG YAN | URBANUS

Jade Bamboo Culture Plaza / MENG YAN | URBANUS - SquareJade Bamboo Culture Plaza / MENG YAN | URBANUS - SquareJade Bamboo Culture Plaza / MENG YAN | URBANUS - SquareJade Bamboo Culture Plaza / MENG YAN | URBANUS - SquareJade Bamboo Culture Plaza / MENG YAN | URBANUS - More Images+ 15

Shenzhen, China
  • Architects: MENG YAN | URBANUS
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  6870
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2009

Hua Qiang Bei Road / Work AC

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Hua Qiang Bei Road / Work AC - Image 19 of 4
© Work AC

WORKac‘s design for a 1-kilometer section of Hua Qiang Bei Road in Shenzhen was awarded first prize. The design responds to the area’s growing commercial character which has unfortunately created traffic problems. For the proposal, the road becomes a series of “strategic interventions” where “five iconic lanterns”, (twisting bands of required program) create unique, visible destinations through a process of “urban acupuncture”.

More images and more about the design after the break.

Honeycomb / SAKO Architects

Honeycomb / SAKO Architects - Restaurant, Table, ChairHoneycomb / SAKO Architects - RestaurantHoneycomb / SAKO Architects - Restaurant, ChairHoneycomb / SAKO Architects - Restaurant, Table, Lighting, ChairHoneycomb / SAKO Architects - More Images+ 17

Monster Footprints / MAD

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Monster Footprints / MAD - Image 9 of 4

MAD Architects’ latest contribution to Shenzhen came in the form of two huge monster footprints. The design, made for the Urbanism\Architecture Shenzhen & Hongkong Bi-city Biennale, is a sunken space that functions as a playground. Paved in pink EPDM material, the Monster’s Footprint attempts to enter a very “surreal reality”, and offer a possibility for city dwellers to find their own freedom and joy in the Citizen Square. The playful space illustrates MAD ‘s ability to bring their design attitude to smaller scale projects.

More images after the break.

Four Towers in One Competition / Morphosis

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Four Towers in One Competition / Morphosis - Image 4 of 4

Morphosis just shared with us their proposal for the Four Towers in One Competition. The competition (which Steven Holl Architects ultimately won) asked participants to design an office tower complex for the new Shenzhen Stock Exchange Headquarters in the Futian commercial business district. The area was in need of a unified urban plan that would include the Headquarters for the new office towers of Shenzhen Media Group, China Construction Bank, China Insurance Group, and Southern & Bosera Funds. For Morphosis’ proposal, rather than creating various disconnected vertical skyscrapers, the project aims to create one “cohesive, interwoven district.” By conceiving the sites as 3-dimensional envelopes rather than flat 2-dimensional footprints, the buildings can be interwoven to “facilitate a network of interlocking forms reminiscent of the venerated Chinese puzzle.”

More images and further project description after the break.