Henn Architekten to Design Wenzhou Central Business District
Posted: Friday, November 12, 2010 | ↓ 4 comments
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German practice HENN ARCHITEKTEN has 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 Berlin-based design & research studio HENN StudioB.

Competition-winning design for the new Wenzhou Central Business District by HENN ARCHITEKTEN

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Competition-winning design for the new Wenzhou Central Business District by HENN ARCHITEKTEN

Project Description:

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.

Design concept river delta

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Design concept river delta

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. On ground level, this architectural landscape merges with the flowing form of the buildings and simultaneously traces the movement of their users.

Master plan

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Master plan

The five towers stand in a staggered row to ensure a largely unrestricted view of the river. 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. 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.

Aerial view

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Aerial view

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. 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.

Perspective river

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Perspective river

Project Details:

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

Main street

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Main street

Riverfront

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Riverfront

Landmark tower

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Landmark tower

Office courtyards

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Office courtyards

Main entrance

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Main entrance

Central park

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Central park

Entrance landmark tower

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Entrance landmark tower

Long section park

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Long section park

short section

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short section


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Comments:
Ryan Reinicken
US
Sunday, November 14, 2010
hmm, nice renderings, but it's just some ugly stubby towers in the park... so chance for urban street life. ugh.

rodriguez berlez
Netherland
Monday, November 15, 2010
proportion and design is not matching with the MLP images. I see there fluid forms, but what is the elevation look like??? unbelievable such a discrepancy, why does such a good firm is trying to imitate Asymtote and others??! They dont need that stuff in China - it will look built even worst than the proposal...poor design..Think German - Quality First!

Last Exit
New York, NY
Monday, November 15, 2010
Despite the two poorly written previous comments, it's a rather beautiful and intelligent project if you take the time to give it more than a cursory glance.

sustain Gap
New York, NY
Monday, November 15, 2010
Selling real concept ideas in China seems difficult, so I doubt, that Chinese are interested in more than the visual impact really. The proposal shows open spaces with the typical huge proportion in public spaces, which looks good in master planing level , but in reality no one is using them really.

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