works
irwan soetikno
Irwan Soetikno is an urban designer at RTKL International with extensive experiences across Asia. Previously he was appointed as an architectural & landscape designer in well-known design practices; British Alsop Architect (SMC ALSOP, Singapore) and Japanese HMA Architects, Shanghai. His design work have traversed multidisciplinary boundary of art, architecture, landscape and urban design. With strong interest in design theory and contemporary practice, he is committed to push the theoretical knowledge into practice, and cultivate a critical academic research for design practice. His research paper has been published and presented for international urban design conference and his photography works has been published and exhibited in China, Singapore, Indonesia, US and Germany. His design interest includes Housing, Hybrid Buildings, & Urban Design.
Education M.Arch (EPMA / English Program Master of Architecture), 2010-2012 Tsinghua University, School of Architecture, Beijing, China Chinese Intermediate, 2005-2006 Shanghai Jiaotong University, Shanghai, China B.Arch Eng, 1997-2001 Parahyangan Catholic University, Bandung, Indonesia
Professional Experiences Urban Designer, RTKL International, Beijing, 2012-now Haikou Xiuying Port Harbor Urban Regeneration, Hainan, China Architectural Designer, SPARCH / SMC ALSOP, Singapore, 2007-2010 Project Sugarcane competition, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam Hyderabad Metropolitan Development Authority Office Competition, Hyderabad, India Guangzhou East Office Tower competition, Guangzhou, China Space Station 1&2, Hyderabad, India Architectural Designer, Andy Fisher Workshop, Singapore, 2006-2007 Condominium, 150,000 sqft, Baner, Puna, India Master plan, harbor - Port Louis, Mauritius Master plan, 32 acre mix-development, Airport Road, Puna, India Private villa, 2 acre, Bangalore, India Architect, HMA Architects & Designers, Shanghai, 2005-2006 X2 – IT Centre, Shanghai, China Zhongkai Residential, Nanchang, China
www.ishenstudio.com
ishenstudio@yahoo.com
Soho Island Residential, Suzhou, China Landscape Designer, LandArt (Shanghai), Shanghai, 2002-2005 Peace Garden Residential, Shanghai, China Narada Housing, Suzhou, China Bi ling wan Residential, Shanghai, China Junior Architect, GRK- Urban Revitalization Group, Bandung, Indonesia 2001-2002
Proceeding Conference Mnemonic Practice: Hybrid Urban Village as Reconstruction of Memory of Places; Urban Design Asia (October 2012), Seoul, South Korea. Myth & The City: Dissolution of Mythical Traditional Environment; International Urban Design Conference, Design Places ( April 2012), University of Nottingham, UK.
Publication Mnemonic Practice: Hybrid Urban Village as Reconstruction of Memory of Places; Beijing Planning Review, March 2013. Upcoming publication: SCROOPE 23, Urban Crisis (July 2013), The Cambridge Architecture Journal, University of Cambridge, UK Photography, accompanying articles; The use of the old buildings, the war of space; DI Architecture & Design Magazine, Shanghai, China (no 119, 2005 08 25) Stones and stone architecture design in China; DI Architecture & Design Magazine, Shanghai, China (no 118, 2005 06 25)
Awards / Exhibition Beijing Government Scholarship 2011 Research Assistantship, Tsinghua University, School of Architecture, 2010-2012 INTERNATIONAL PHOTOGRAPHY AWARDS, US 2005 Honorable mention for non-professional architecture category SALON FOTO INDONESIA (SFI) XXVI , 2005 Awarded bronze medal for color prints category Exhibitions: SFI Exhibition in Batam, Indonesia SFI Exhibition in Ministry of International Cultural & Art (MICA), Singapore CREATIVE PHOTOGRAPHY COMPETITION IN CHINA, 2005 (WANG XIAO HUI - BASF) Selected work published on exhibition catalogue in 2005 CHINA PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST "SQUARE OF THE CITY", 2005 Selected work Best Employee of the Year, (LandArt Shanghai, 2004)
www.ishenstudio.com
ishenstudio@yahoo.com
content EUCALYPTUS HOUSE Bangalore, India
myth and the city essay
Beijing Palace City Scroll at the National Museum of China, Beijing
AIDS MEMORIAL PARK international competition, NYC HMDA HEADQUARTER Hyderabad, India
SPACE STATION ONE Hyderabad, India
X2-IT CENTER Shanghai, China RESILIENT CITY: LIBERATING THE MARCO POLO ISLAND
Beijing, China
ERTONG HOUSING Beijing, China TERRAIN VAGUE Beijing, China
MNEMONIC PRACTICE
PEACE GARDEN RESIDENTIAL Shanghai, China
essay
MNEMONIC PRACTICE MASTER THESIS, 2012
Ruin of Gedong Songo Temple, Central Java, Indonesia. (Left, Photo by author)
The Spatial organization of Balinese temple. The element of water & sound, aroma & smell, visual of ornaments and nature, tactility of material and natural phenomenon altogether compose the perception of place (Above, photo by author). The layers & illusion of space/ the formal dimension (Below, photo by author).
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MNEMONIC PRACTICE MASTER THESIS, 2012
JUNHUA URBAN REDEVELOPMENT Zhongshan, Guangzhou, China
STATE GRID HEADQUARTERS Tianjin, China
SOHO ISLAND Suzhou, China
GUANGYANG PEACOCK CITY Guangyang, China
GUANGZHOU EAST TOWER Guangzhou, China
PROJECT SUGARCANE Hochimin City, Vietnam
HAIKOU URBAN REGENERATION Xiuying Port, Haikou, China
Beijing Palace City Scroll at the National Museum of China, Beijing
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Myth and the City Dissolution of Mythical Traditional Environment (Selected for International Urban Design Conference: DESIGNING PLACES, University of Nottingham, UK, April 2012)
irwan soetikno / ishenstudio@yahoo.com
Myth, as a form of culture, is not merely a product of traditional culture and its society. Myth with its symbol and representation is also palpable in modern society and its city. Beijing as a culmination of ancient imperial city and modern capitalist of new China, emerges as a place of peculiar environment. It lays in between the duality of traditional environment and modern urbanism. Established on cosmic order and currently adopted the principle of ‘generic city’, Beijing is undoubtedly an intriguing study model of modern Asian cities in the age of globalisation. By looking at its historical architectural artefact and new urban fabric, the author attempt to re-establish the notion of: myth of modern city today. Coming from origin where myth are widely celebrated, he believes myth is still an important element to define sense of place in our modern city.
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Shrinking Horizon Wanchun Pavilion is a modest building with
Seeing Manhattan from the 110th floor of the
footprint less than 20X20m. Unlike the Twin
World Trade Centre. Beneath the haze stirred
Towers which rose in heroic proportion and
up by the wind, the urban island, a sea in the
sophisticated glazed-skin, this little pavilion is
middle of the sea, lifts up the skyscrapers over
decorated with delicate ornaments with its
Wall Street, sinks down at Greenwich, then
three layers pitch-roof humbly stretched to the
rises again to the crests of Midtown, quietly
sky. It is a piece of structure which is
passes over Central Park and finally undulates
neglected and almost forgotten, a memory of
off into the distance beyond Harlem. A wave
ancient city, which is now invaded by modern
of verticals. Its agitation is momentarily
iconic buildings.
arrested by vision.1
From this peak, I could observe the historical core of Beijing, which sits in the axial cosmic
Standing at the Wanchun Pavilion of Jingshan
order recognised as Feng Shui. To the south,
Park, the peak of Beijing’s historical core,
series of golden roofs of imperial palace rising
which rises almost 95m above the sea level,
from the hidden ground. Glowing under the
reminds me of Michel de Certeau’s pesonal
warm summer sunlight they reveal a
experience from the peak of New York City.
mysterious ‘text’ to the stranger like me who
Though the point where Certeau observed
simply can only enjoy the poetic harmony of
Manhattan later shrunk to Ground Zero and
their composition. The linear axis to the north
become a memorial site after the September
which is marked by several gate towers,
11 violent attack, the point where I stand
guarded by green landscape which climbs up
survived after more than 500 years history of
to the peak. My favourite scene, the west side,
imperial China and become a memorial after
where the man made water body form series
the capitalism ruled over the city.
of lakes and merge into park. There stood a
World Trade Centre is a masterpiece of a
White Pagoda shadowed by setting sun in the
guilty man, Minoru Yamasaki, after his Pruitt-
unobstructed horizon, signified the end of an
Igoe was levelled to the ground, signified the
episode. Starting from that horizon, I was
death of modernism. Later, when World Trade
awoken by colour of life which I have been
Centre was erected, Yamasaki again suffered
missing for such a long time. A wisdom of a
bitter criticism for his tallest twin tower which
ancient city, a myth which brings me to a
was regarded as anti-urban.2 Today, a decade
curiosity.
after 9/11 tragedy, the world has realised its lost of the most iconic piece in modern history, a monument of its modern civilisation. A memory of a city... 1 Certeau, Michel de. The Practice of Everyday Life, 1988, p91 2 Sudjic, Deyan. The Edifice Complex, How the Rich and Powerful Shape the World, 2005, p350
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Jingshan Park within the Ancient City layout. (Sketch by the author) Forbidden City from Wanchun Pavilion at Jingshan Park. (Photo by the author)
Jingshan Park Forbidden City
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the new capitalism, breeds new urban form;
Peculiar Environment
shopping malls, apartment blocks, numerous In the twentieth century ‘flat world’, tension
shiny skyscrapers and complex infrastructure.
between globalisation and regionalism still Within those new urban elements, the myth of
remain a polemic issue, especially in the
modern city, dictated by economic process of
developing Asian region which experiencing
capitalism, replace the traditional myth of
the rapid urbanisation--with tremendous
historical core. As Roland Barthes asserted in
influence from role model of modern cities in
his Mythologies, myth will only remain the
Europe and North America. ‘Roman Operating
letter as it becomes form and the meaning
System’ as elucidated in Mutations3, has
leaves its contingency behind,5 so is the
become a generic principle of the modern
condition of Beijing historical core. The
cities in the West. This condition remains
profound knowledge, idea and concept of
palpable in emerging metropolis globally,
imperial China period in establishing their city
which is recognised as generic city. Beijing--
and living environment remain an artefact now.
the ancient China’s capital--on the other hand,
It is seen as a series of letter which constitute
as theorised by Kevin Lynch in Good City
a bigger text in a new system of modern city.
Form, was built on the foundation of cosmic
With the endless modern theory and
theory. 4 This duality of generic city and cosmic
knowledge of architecture and city we could
historic foundation of modern Beijing now--
attempt to decode those text, but it will remain
under the rule of capitalism--composes its
a myth, as our interpretation from modern
urban condition as a place of peculiar
perspective operates in different realm from
environment.
the one of which the text is created. Just Its peculiarity exists in a dualism of two
imagine reading a Chinese character. As a
polarities. A resistance of tradition and
foreigner in China which do not read Chinese,
aggression of modernity. An entrapment of
I could still ‘read’ Chinese characters which is
historical foundation--the old Forbidden City--
ubiquitous in every corners of the city.
within the expansion of tabula rasa. The
However my capacity in reading Chinese is
interpolation of cosmic order with new rational
limited in recognising its formal pattern and
urban planning matrix. The philosophy of
stroke without further capability to absorb its
Confucius which become the underlying idea
meaning. In this context, the Chinese
of Beijing’s regular symmetrical architectural
character just function as a myth.
order and Taoism which counterbalanced it with organic natural form in garden was such a dynamic realm both as physical and spiritual. Now the synergy of ‘Chi’ appears as disrupted by the ‘economic influx’ which is enforced by
3 Koolhas, Rem. Mutations: Harvard Project in the City, 2000, p10 4 Lynch, Kevin. Good City Form, 1981, p73 5 Barthes, Roland. Mythologies, 2009, p141
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Myth defines our place and makes our city
Without our enough capacity to read its
interesting. In his entry for the Amiens
profound meaning, this myth becomes more
competition, Leon Krier placed church and
interesting as its interpretation is open to each
bell-tower in the centre of town, though people
of our approaches. One could read it as
didn’t go to church anymore, simple to fulfil
literally massive linear red wall, or enjoy its
mystical and symbolic function. 6 Similar to
ambiguous delicate ornamentation, or
church in medieval age of Europe, empire is
experience the tactility of its ancient structure,
another political organisation which define
and it still remain a myth. As I climb into the
territory, authority and
rights 7 and
peak of Wanchun Pavilion of Jingshan Park, I
capable of
would enjoy reading the peculiarity of its text.
establishing myth in modern city through its architectural artefact. Just like Krier’s Church and bell-tower, Forbidden City in a more powerful manner has established a myth to modern city of Beijing.
CCTV Headquarters by OMA. (Photo by the author)
6
Ellin, Nan. Postmodern Urbanism, 1999, p35
7 Sassen, Saskia. Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages, 2008, p31
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Adjacent to Beijing Television Cultural Centre
Desire for Myth
which was on fire in 2009, CCTV and its Iconic building emerges from the modern city
surrounding remain silent despite the bustling
to establish an identity and ‘brand’ in the midst
traffic and highway of this new CBD keep
of global competitiveness. Old capital of China,
rumbling, obstructing its gigantic figure.
in its wake after economic reform, including
Moving along the street level at its pedestal,
those which embrace the power of myth, of
one can only notice its awkward leaning loop
urban transformation and modernisation,
tower protruding up in the sky and above your
through proliferation of iconic buildings. From
head without ever enjoying its full ‘framed
past decades, Beijing’s urban fabric has
hole’ image.
experienced tremendous changes. The city If the forbidden city and its traditional myth is
has become an epicentre of modern and hyper
represented from the frontal pictorial view of
architectural objects, a massive collection of
Tian An Men and can be enjoyed by large
works from Pritzker Prize winner, Starchitect,
public from Tian An Men square, then CCTV
famous names, foreign practices, and local
tower and its modern myth is to be perceived
young emerging architects.
in different way. Its complete ‘framed hole’ can To convince a nation, which once relied on
be comprehend only through vertical hierarchy,
cosmic order--a traditional principle which is
by observer who fly in the sky, or live hundreds
considered myth in modern culture--in
meter away in the top of SOHO apartment by
establishing its auspicious city, Charles Jencks
Riken Yamamoto, or snooped miles away from
insinuated Koolhaas’s CCTV tower as new
the top of Wanchun Pavilion--as what I did
symbol; Chinese moon
gate.8
Although that
before. This paradigm shift from horizontal
intriguing statement was later understood
point of view to vertical perspective obviously
simply as a tactic to inject this new structure
marked the transformation of imperial structure
into Chinese society, CCTV tower is perhaps a
to socialist society and finally to capitalist
Beijing new icon, but never a Chinese moon
nation. Myth which commonly is believed to
gate.
dwell only in ancient or traditional culture, is in fact abides in every age. And only history will
Flanked by the high-speed highway, long
trace its evident and manifestation.
linear ring-road, and massive high-rise, the perfect volume of the CCTV moon gate--a framed hole, or the heavy shape made in bronze and jade thousands of years ago in China as a symbol of exchange9 --can only be captured from high position in the sky.
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8
Sudjic, Deyan. The Edifice Complex, How the Rich and Powerful Shape the World, 2005, p135
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ibid.
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recognised architects in every projects, they
Made of SOHO
brought rich architectural expression to the city In principle, sense of place in the historical city
and provide new bench mark of life-style.
like Beijing can be represented through
There are almost ten large developments
encounter to two different contrast territory.
completed in a decade. Among those iconic
The first territory, old historical core, marked by
development are the white box Jianwai SOHO
the world heritage site of Forbidden City and
by Riken Yamamoto, the vibrant colourful
its surrounding, which undoubtedly become
Sanlitun SOHO by Kengo Kuma, and the
the main tourist attraction into this city. The
currently under-construction futuristic Galaxy
second territory will be the new CBD, a new
SOHO by Zaha Hadid.
business centre which operate the business When modern urban centre of Beijing like
and financial activities of large influx of foreign
Chaoyang CBD is expanding in rapid
investments. Located at the east of old
transformation, our notion to the identity of
historical core, the new CBD at Chaoyang
place is obliviously distracted from permanent
district, in between the 3rd and 4th Ring Road,
mythical symbol of old city’s core to the new
has spurred the massive development of
dynamic modern architecture collection. The
business and financial core of modern Beijing.
equal tension between this two forces makes
It’s an international home for expatriates, a
the city an interesting playground: a place with
new territory of exchange to the world, which
broad spectrum of spatial diversity for its
perhaps justify Jencks attempt to identify
inhabitant to escape.
Koolhaas CCTV tower as ‘symbol of exchange’.
To mitigate the radical transition from its history, many modern architectural project in
If the forbidden city and its surrounding still
Beijing seeks cultural identity or conceptual
can be navigated pleasantly by foot, Chaoyang
narrative behind its physical manifestation.
CBD will be exhaustedly walked through. At
Red and Golden colour for instance, which is
this area, large and massive development--
palpable in old city’s core, is repeated in
directed by developers--are erected
Norman Foster’s Beijing Capital airport to
spontaneously responding to the economic
resemble a Chinese identity. Or the vibrant red
booming. Office towers, apartment blocks, and
interior of Herzog and de Meuron’s Bird Nest
shopping malls are ubiquitous, shaping every
Stadium, remind us of China’s energy.
street edges. With every ambition to establish city’s identity and to deliver the future dream,
Delicate ornamentation and detail of ancient
modern Beijing’s architectonic qualities is
Chinese architecture which represent the
pushed to the best the country’s construction
finest artistic achievement in the past is also
engineer can achieve.
somehow appear in the urban condition. Each of the massive buildings in Chaoyang for
As the largest real-estate developer in Beijing,
instance, present its modern identity with
SOHO China, is probably one of those who
unique colour, texture & detail, and often in its
responsible in shaping the image of modern
super large scale make the environment
Beijing. By employing different internationally
perceived more chaotic and nauseous. This
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perception is experienced, for example, when
different architectural skin / surface which
walking through several super blocks of SOHO
predominantly dictate the urban image will
development. From white surface of
either raise a spontaneous excitement or
Guanghualu SOHO with decorated circular
delusion. And with plenty super large block
windows, to black dynamic fragmented lines of
which is decorated with ‘unique’ surface and
Shangdu SOHO, to its neighbour of brownish
form, Beijing will obviously emerge as a new
granite cladded surface of Chaowai SOHO,
playground for designer and inhabitant who
one will experience different sensation of
desire for delirium.
place. The radical and frequent transition in short period of time gained by exposure to
Sanlitun SOHO by Kengo Kuma. Its vibrant colour brings attraction to urban environment. (Photo by the author) Chaowai SOHO with articulated building surface, opposite the Shangdu SOHO.(Photo by the author)
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in the midst of consumptive society which
Made of Nature
hunger for massive energy. Sustainability and It’s been obvious that during the past decades
green become the winner of modern myth
nature has become the subordinate to man
when the whole world painstakingly exerts its
which is reflected in modern cities. The
agenda and wish to champion the battle
rhetorical reciprocity of nature and man in
against the deteriorated world which is
design and planning process has been
exhausted of being exploited by its master.
repeatedly discussed though there is not many Just like a pendulum swing10 , the arising
implication in real practice. The legendary
sustainable agenda of the contemporary city
‘Design with Nature’ by Ian McHarg which is
and urbanism, has in fact oscillated from
articulated again by Charles Waldheim in his
vernacular or traditional culture within many
theory of Landscape Urbanism, remain us to
Asian region, which has been often neglected.
return to nature process as starting point in
The propagation of capitalism and democratic-
designing our urban environment instead of
ism which vastly spread across this region
being dictated by merely economic process.
during the postwar and post-colonialism has
The current emerging sustainable issue and
been easily injected into most Asian countries
green word are again rooted in nature: our
which were in junction of liberation, freedom
dependance of natural resources and our
and revolution. This ideological transformation,
responsibility in maintaining its well being.
and led by modernization and globalization,
However, the propagation of this issue is being
has radically changed the way people live, the
distorted by sustainable and green notion
social structure, and belief which is self-
which simply referring to element of nature and
evident in the form of its architecture and city.
‘green’ as plant or literally green. This
At the tipping point of globalization, where the
condition leads sustainable and green design
ethical and mythical nucleus 11 of traditional
as a fashion where images of buildings
culture are eradicated from landscape of
wrapped by green blanket, or futuristic urban
modern city, Critical Regionalism12 emerges
settlement within dense green forest, often
as a reflection of cultural identity.
become the imaginary vision of designer. Or it often abused by developer to promote their
As the key principle which underlying the
high rating ‘green mark’ development which is
vernacular architecture of traditional Asian
operated by smart building technology that
cities, nature plays important role in
reduced great amount of energy consumption
determining the building process, operation
10 Arnold Toynbee is a pioneer in introducing the pendular swing theory of history (A study of History, 1947). It is often used to conceptualize the succession of ideas as a pendular swing, a cycle, or a spiral whereby a particular spirit of the time is replaced--either gradually or abruptly--by another one. (Ellin, Nan. Postmodern Urbanism, 1999, p297) 11 In defending the regionalism, Paul Ricoeur referred the ethical and mythical nucleus as the creative nucleus of great civilization and culture which is prone to the subtle destruction by ‘universalization’. (Frampton, Kenneth. Modern Architecture, A Critical History, 2007, p314) 12 Critical Regionalism is an approach to architecture that strives to counter placelessness and lack of identity in Modern Architecture by using the building's geographical context. The term Critical Regionalism was first used by the architectural theorists Alexander Tzonis and Liane Lefaivre and, with a slightly different meaning, by the historian-theorist Kenneth Frampton. (wikipedia)
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and even the social construct. Within this
comfort. This minimum control over the nature
mechanism, sustainability is obviously
and its element implicate the mythical
embedded into its holistic process. Therefore,
conception of place in traditional environment
sustainability which apparently swing from the
as its natural condition is changeable. In this
phenomenon of climatic change and energy
context, human being is only a performer. The
crisis in 21st century, after decades of nature
rain, hot, wind and constellation of sky, colour
exploitation following the industrial revolution,
of the day, and entire cycle of his environment
is in fact a precious wisdom of traditional
defining the place of his existence. Within this
culture which is diminished under the
complex entity he celebrates and perform his
spectacle of capitalism.
routine and ritual. A simple concept of this mechanism can be comprehend through
Quite similar to ancient China, mythical
performance of Balinese dance; Tari Kecak.
traditional environment in Indonesia was based on nature. The settlement and city is
Set in stage of nature: often during sun set
organised by cosmic order, local belief or
with its magnificent scenery, the dance is
religion, and traditional values. Place is
performed by group of people in circular
experienced beyond the man-made physical
formation which depict the ancient Hindu
boundary or object. The sensation of being in
Ramayana epoch. As the sun lower its position
a particular place is also associated with
and the day getting darker, the roaring voices
smells or aroma, sounds, and the change of
of the performer with minimum instrumental
natural phenomena. Other intangible aspect
tool will occupy the atmosphere. At the peak of
such as ritual, myth, and local belief also
the show, a dancer in his unconscious spirit is
contributed to one’s perception of place. The
believed to communicate with god and jumped
aroma of burning offering in Balinese village
into the bursting fire which enlighten the
will obviously remind one who approach a
darkness of nature. The interplay of natural
certain territory before he/she can visually
setting and the act is deliberately considered in
define the place. Despite its controversial, the
this performance. It is a reflection of mythical
adhan, Islamic call for prayer, creates such a
harmony which is extinct in our rational
mythical ambience when it resounds with the
modern city.
resting sunset in colorful horizon, positioning oneself in a place between physical and spiritual realm. In traditional environment, nature is not just a source to sustain the life but also as a place to perform. If In the modern city where our existence and performance are so much encapsulated by objects; building and infrastructure, traditional environment allows optimum interaction with nature while providing minimum enclosure to maintain human
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Gauzin-Mler, Dominique. Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism: concepts, technologies, examples. Basel, Birkhauser, 2002. Jacobs, Jane. The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Modern Library, 2011.
The Indonesian Balinese traditional dance (Tari Kecak) performed at the stage of nature, Bali. (Photo by the author)
Keswick, Maggie. The Chinese Garden, St. Martin’s Press, 1978. Koolhas, Rem. Mutations: Harvard Project in the City. Barcelona, Actar 2000.
Bibliography:
Lefaivre, Liane and Alexander Tzonis. Architecture of Regionalism in the Age of Globalization; Peaks and Valleys in the Flat World. Routledge, 2012.
Barthes, Roland. Mythologies. London, Vintage Books, 2009. Certeau, Michel de. The Practice of Everyday Life. University of California Press, 1988.
Lynch, Kevin. Good City Form. Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press 1981.
Ellin, Nan. Postmodern Urbanism. Princeton Architectural Press, 1999.
Lynch, Kevin. The Image of The City. Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press 1960.
Frampton, Kenneth. Modern Architecture, A Critical History. Thames and Hudson, 2007.
Sudjic, Deyan. The Edifice Complex, How the Rich and Powerful Shape the World. New York, The Penguin Press, 2005.
Gauzin-Mler, Dominique. Sustainable Architecture and Urbanism: concepts, technologies, examples. Basel, Birkhauser, 2002.
Sassen, Saskia. Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages. New York, Princeton University Press, 2008.
Jacobs, Jane. The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Modern Library, 2011.
Waldheim, Charles. The Landscape Urbanism Reader. Princeton Architectural Press, New York, 2006.
Keswick, Maggie. The Chinese Garden, St. Martin’s Press, 1978.
Wu Liangyong, Rehabilitating The Old City of Beijing; A project in the Ju’er Hutong Neighbourhood, Vancouver, UBC Press, 1999.
Koolhas, Rem. Mutations: Harvard Project in the City. Barcelona, Actar 2000. Lefaivre, Liane and Alexander Tzonis. Architecture of Regionalism in the Age of Globalization; Peaks and Valleys in the Flat World. Routledge, 2012. Lynch, Kevin. Good City Form. Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press 1981.
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Lynch, Kevin. The Image of The City. Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press 1960. Sudjic, Deyan. The Edifice Complex, How the Rich and Powerful Shape the World. New York, The Penguin Press, 2005. Sassen, Saskia. Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages. New York, Princeton University Press, 2008. Waldheim, Charles. The Landscape Urbanism Reader. Princeton Architectural Press, New York, 2006. Wu Liangyong, Rehabilitating The Old City of Beijing; A project in the Ju’er Hutong Neighbourhood, Vancouver, UBC Press, 1999. 12
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landscape architecture
professional
AIDS MEMORIAL PARK NEW YORK CITY
INTERNATIONAL COMPETITION, JANUARY 2012 PERSONAL WORK
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irwan soetikno
WORKS
This international competition is organized by The New York City AIDS Memorial Park Campaign, a coalition of individuals and organizations dedicated to the recognition and preservation of the ongoing history of the AIDS crisis. In the 30th year of the epidemic, the campaign seek to honor the more than 100,000 New York City men, women and children who have died from AIDS, and to commemorate and celebrate the efforts of the caregivers and activists who responded heroically to the crisis. The campaign also represent artists, health care providers, historians, family, friends and neighbors committed to remembering the history of the crisis.
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landscape architecture
professional
POETIC MEMORY OF THE FUTURE Embraced by three unique edges
with its poetic history and memory, the AIDS MEMORIAL PARK celebrates the duality of Life and Death, Joy and Sorrow, Memory and Fantasy. As one scroll along the park, the continuous red ribbon wall represents the duality of human nature who stumble in a little corner and overcome in a hopeful ripple of water. The open joyful flowers and shrubs patches contrasted with dense forest at the other half of park.
AIDS MEMORIAL PLAN
W 12TH STREET
GR
EE
NW
IC
H
AV
EN
UE
7TH AVENUE
Embedded into the floor, in between rustic cobble stones, are wooden stripe panel which could be use as ‘text’. The fragility of the wooden surface which incapable of retaining the ‘text’ permanently is similar to our flesh which fade away and left our ‘text’ to this world. At the corner of the busy traffic, the water spout burst high four meter to the sky, spread the rainbow, and falling down to the pool into teardrops. As it whispers a melodious song, I will step down my feet along its edge into another world below... RED RIBBON WALL
top up soil, with linear stripe for underground skylight seasonal flowers and shrubs the “text”; embedded wooden panel in the cobble stone floor
COMPONENT
A
B
spiral entrance to the basement
GROUND LEVEL
SE
existing structure at the basement
UNDERGROUND LEVEL
SE
A
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irwan soetikno
WORKS
Section A
Section B
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architecture
professional
EUCALYPTUS HOUSE
BANGALORE, INDIA
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN, 2007 PROFESSIONAL WORK: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER, ANDY FISHER WORKSHOP, SINGAPORE
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irwan soetikno
WORKS unique environment
The house is located on the unique contryside environment in the middle of the eucalyptus forest with reddish soil, open view towards the natural lake, and fresh air in local cool temperature.
location and approaches
A number of factors have been considered when finalising the position of the location of the building on the site. The house is positioned at the highest point of the plot maximising the views over the countryside and future lake to the north. Locating the house remote from the riding school increases the importance of the journey to the building across the site.
function and brief
The Client has identified 3 main uses for the house; Family, Business and Hobby. The house needs to be a place where he can relax with his family while it will also serve as a place to accomodate his business meeting and activities. The client has also required special preference to design his house and its surroundings as base to enjoy his passion for horse riding with friends and family.
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HMDA HEADQUARTER (HYDERABAD METROPOLITAN DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY), INDIA COMPETITION CONCEPTUAL DESIGN, 2010 PROFESSIONAL WORK: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER, SPARCH, SINGAPORE
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project data: SPARCH 2009, owned by Aliens Group, principal/design architect Stephen Pimbley GFA 50,000sqm, program Government Office, Banking and Business center, Health club and facility, research and development center status submission for competition
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brief of programes by client
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proposed programes
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SPACE STATION ONE HYDERABAD. INDIA
BUILT PROJECT, 2007-2010 PROFESSIONAL WORK: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER, SPARCH, SINGAPORE
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2009 best residential development - future, awarded by Cityscape Asia project data: SPARCH 2007-currently, owned by Aliens Group, principal/design architect Stephen Pimbley, project architect Paul Merry site area 64.2 acres, GFA 754,000sqm, program 2000 units residential units, clubhouse, commercial podium and service apartment tower status built.
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1 4
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1. Aerial View 2. Clubhouse and the pool deck 3. Clubhouse, sport hall 4. Masterplan 5. Site photo at early construction
(All 3D visualization are done by 3D Artist)
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The design and planning of this 2000 residential units adhere to local ‘vastu’ planning guidelines where each units should have its own ‘physical boundary’ and not allowed to share wall with its neighbour. Entrance to the unit should be from south direction, and the organisation of rooms within the units are to follow the specific guidelines.
SPACE STATION - 1 development first floor plan
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landscape architecture
professional
X2-IT CENTER
CREATIVE INDUSTRY, SHANGHAI
LANDSCAPE CONCEPTUAL DESIGN: BUILT 2005 PROFESSIONAL WORK: HMA ARCHITECTS & DESIGNERS, SHANGHAI
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EXPLORING TERRAIN VAGUE TSINGHUA STUDENT CENTER, BEIJING
STUDIO SPACE DESIGN & ARCHITECTURE, TSINGHUA UNIVERSITY, AUTUMN 2010 PERSONAL ACADEMIC WORK
Cities have always been for gathering, an essential function that telegraphs through all aspects of urban space, through its social, material and spiritual development. The leftover spaces of our cities suffer many slights. While they are a part of our cities they cannot, on their own, be defined according to set functional categories such as “entertainment” , “retail”, and “administrative” or urban categories such as “public”, “semi-public”, “street” or “plaza”. But leftover (often ‘negative’ spaces can be found within any urban or use category or take on any of these identities. The project is to find a leftover urban space (‘death point’) and to activate it using design. This space can be either be an open infill site, calling for a new building on what is now a ‘negative space’, or an existing low quality building calling for repair or renovation. Students are to select their own site taking into consideration the functional, aesthetic, cultural and social requirements of urban space. Site should be located within the Tsinghua University campus, which act as model of urban territory. The intent of this studio is to explore new avenues of research and design in urban space and the social landscape. Such thoughtful investigations are critical at this time of increasing frustration with current modes of urban development.
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site section
basement
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roof top
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RESILIENT CITY:
LIBERATING THE MARCO POLO ISLAND, BEIJING URBAN PLANNING & DESIGN STUDIO, TSINGHUA UNIVERSITY, FALL 2010 PERSONAL ACADEMIC WORK
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ERTONG HOUSING CREATIVE INDUSTRY DEVELOPMENT, BEIJING
GREEN BUILDING DESIGN STUDIO, TSINGHUA UNIVERSITY, SPRING 2011 PERSONAL ACADEMIC WORK
Shou Gang Er Tong Mechanical factory located in the east pasrt of Shijingshan in Beijing, border upon Fengtai district. It is about 15 km to the city center and 3 km to the main site of Shou Gang group. The factory located in the first green belt of Beijing, with the total planning area of 249 ha, and factory total area of 84 ha. Shou Gang Er Tong Mechanical Factory was formerly the Beijing Second Mechanical Factory, which was founded in 1958 and went bankrupt in 1992. In 2002 the company was restructured and and moved to the new factory, left the old factory abandoned for almost 10 years. Faculty: Thomas Herzog (TUM), Zhang Yue, Zou Tao, George Konihiro, Odilo Schoch, Zhang Linyun
The abandoned factory remain a problematic issue and calls for new creative proposal which could address the new creative use, redevelopment and sustainability. The site now are surrounded by complex layer of urban fabric, comprises of migrant village, residential area, commercial center, large infrastructure, park, and ruins. The studio is divided into two part; urban planning and design, and architectural intervention (housing design). The studio conducted with design workshop, seminar on green building design and sustainability, site visit, and lectures on housing and green building design.
Factory regeneration by Thomas Herzog (photo by author)
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site mapping
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02
Mnemonic Practice: Hybrid Urban Village as Reconstruction of Memory of Places (M.Arch Thesis; Published on Proceeding Conference and presented at International Urban Design Conference: FUTURE CITIES IN ASIA, Seoul, November 2012; Upcoming Publication by Beijing Planning Review 2013) irwan soetikno / ishenstudio@yahoo.com
Does Architecture still matter? Are traditional and vernacular values still important to be explored and can they be embodied into the modern architecture--driven by scientific and technological development--which has occupied modern Asian metropolis following post-colonialism, capitalism and globalization? In this thesis, to re-thinking the meaning and values of traditional and vernacular, I propose phenomenology as point of departure, and mnemonic practice as design methodology. By analyzing the phenomenon of the modern and traditional environment, which I encountered in different polarity of Indonesian mythical traditional environment (Hindu Temple in Java and Bali) and Chinese historical and modern environment (Chinese Garden & Shanghai metropolis), I develop a theoretical proposition which is central to the dichotomy of formal dimension and transcendental dimension (refer to Husserl, who divided two dimensions from which every system derives its meaning). I believe, in order to restore our modern city and community within the corridor of critical regionalism, we
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have to look back again, and learn from the traditional built environment which is capable to integrate both dimensions. In this condition, place is experienced beyond merely physical perception, and ʻidentityʼ and ʻsense of placeʼ is resonated and registered deep into our memory through different means and meanings. To test out this theoretical proposition, I propose design thesis of Hybrid Urban Village. Itʼs a design intervention on urban village at the Suzhou Creek, Shanghai following the postindustrialization, by adopting the hybrid building typology. Hybrid Urban Village is a new community which offers diversity to generic modern Shanghai urban environment. It is envisioned as a catalyst for Suzhou Creek urban redevelopment. And finally, itʼs a reconstruction of my personal memory of places: a locus of tradition and modernity.
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The objective of this research is to develop a
PART 1:
new perspective for Asian Urbanism, beyond
THEORETICAL PROPOSITION
the exhaustive rigid modern design theory and planning--which focus on speculative quantitative analysis & projection, sustainability and other complexity--while are unable to restore social dimension and cultural
1.1 INTRODUCTION
identity. The research attempts to ‘fill in the gap’ within the large scale urban fabric, by
Regionalism and globalization remains as a
focusing on micro scale urbanism and aiming
polemic issue in the twenty-first century,
to address the issue of identity and sense of
especially in the developing Asian region with
place.
its rapid urbanization with tremendous influence from role model of modern cities in the Europe and North America. ‘Roman operating system’ as elucidated in Mutations 1,
1.1.1 Urbanization & Globalization
has become a generic principle of the modern
There are at least two theories which justify
cities in the West and continue to spread its
the global phenomenon of the world
influence as a model in global modern
metropolis. First, dealing with the urbanization,
metropolis. Ancient Asian cities such as
viewed as an internal factor within a city.
Beijing, Kyoto and Mandurai, on the other
During the course of urbanization, the
hand, as theorized by Kevin Lynch in Good
metropolis evolved out of a collection of
City Form2 was built on the foundation of
individualized programmatic structures
cosmic theory.
strewn across the landscape.3 Second, as the
After decades of development and
external pressure, every cities need to develop
modernization following the post-colonialism,
a strategy to keep up with change, globally
many Asian Cities attempt to repositioning
and locally, and to maintain the advantages
themselves amid the tension between
and competitiveness that they need for
globalization and regionalism. The tension
survival. In China, since the economic
often occurs as a result of rapid transformation
reformation after the Deng Xiaobing era,
and social-political transition, as the cities
government has taken a strategy of building
strive to maintain its cultural values and
Urban Mega Projects (UMPs).4 As an obvious
regional identity, while at the same time need
result of this strategy, there are massive UMPs
to absorb the modernity as the promise for its
which emerge as a collection of individualized
prosperity and success in globalized world.
programatic structures within the metropolis urban fabric, such as Shanghai and Beijing.
1 Koolhas, Rem. Mutations: Harvard Project in the City, Barcelona, Actar 2000. 2 Lynch, Kevin. Good City Form, Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press 1984. 3 Nijenhuis, W. ‘City Frontiers and Their Disappearance’, Architectural Design, v.64, n.3/4, 1994, p15-16 4 Chen, Yawei. Shanghai Pudong, Urban Development In An Era of Global-local Interaction. TU Delft, 2007
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The collection of individual UMPs has caused
Collective Memory, which attempted to
a segregation and discontinuation within the
maintain and reconstruct the identity of place /
city’s urban fabric which created a problematic
city.
issue. Linked Hybrid in Beijing by Steven Holl
During the globalization, these two precedents
is an attempt to resolve this issue by creating a
from European and American cities are widely
porous urban fabric. Linked Hybrid is
adopted by Asian Cities which are undergoing
comprised of eight hybrid buildings with multi
unprecedented development. One extreme
function / programatic requirement, which are
case is Singapore which is experiencing the
linked by series of bridges, making this
major transformation and development based
development an independent city within a city.
on tabula rasa--described by Koolhaas as
However, this operation works in the large
thirty years of tabula rasa; a representation of
scale, and connected bridges act as a new
unique ecology of the contemporary.5
infrastructure which do not resolve the scale for human habitation.
Shanghai Pudong as the center of the new metropolis was also established on tabula rasa
Therefore, one of key issues that we should
and gained its new identity from generic
pay attention here is how to mitigate the gap of
collective iconic towers which marks its
large scale urban fabric with the human scale
economic establishment and prosperity.
habitation? I believe at this period after the
Following the tabula rasa, collective memory
decades of urbanization and globalization, we
emerges a ‘new trend’ signified by many
need to ‘fill in the gap’ in-between the large
conservation projects in major China
scale individualized development by
metropolis, including Shanghai, which is based
rebuilding, reconnecting and redirecting micro
on European model. One of the most notable
scale urban development which is important to
project, Xintiandi redevelopment, was a pilot
restore the human life, social structure and
project in Shanghai which gained a success
cultural identity.
and set a precedent for other similar conservation projects across China. If Gehry’s Bilbao is capable to become catalyst for Bilbao
1.1.2 After Tabula Rasa & Collective
economic development, and often recognized
Memory, What Next? The Modernism design strategy and operation
inclined to promote similar Xintiandi Effect for
of Tabula Rasa in the last past decades in
conservation projects in China which is
European and American cities have been
directed for commercialization. This tendency
proved guilty as this strategy eradicated the
of conservation and preservation which is
identity and history of place. Later during
directed for commercial purpose and profit
postmodernism era in the European context,
should be further questioned and examined,
Aldo Rossi with his Neo-rationalism defended
as it does not fundamentally restore the
the importance of history and memory of
collective memory and historical identity of city.
place, and proposed a new strategy of
Furthermore, most of these projects only serve
5 Koolhaas, Rem. S,M,L,XL, 1998,
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as Bilbao Effect, then Xintiandi in Shanghai is
p1011.
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1.1.3 Iconic, Identity, & Sense of Place
certain group of people and are accessible for certain class of society with power and
The proliferation of iconic buildings as a
particular interest.
strategy to establish an identity / brand
In terms of the spatial organization, most of the
following the globalization is a common
conservation projects which are directed by
phenomena in Asian metropolis. Responding
commercialization purpose did not restore the
to regional and cultural identity, these iconic
spatial identity and meaning. The memory and
buildings are often decorated with local form /
historical identity are simply represented by old
ornament / attribute which attempt to signify
material, symbol, ornament, or old skin of the
the genius loci of particular place / city.
building without necessarily restore the spatial
Symbolism, analogy, and narrative of
organization and meaning of the old
traditional, historical and cultural values are
architecture. This condition is noticeable, for
also often embedded into the modern iconic
example, in the case of commercial hutong of
building, often simply as a strategy; to justify
Beijing Nan Luoguxiang. In this old linear
its existence and position in the city with
hutong, shops are built along the corridor,
unique historical and cultural background, and
decorated and installed with shiny facade,
to rationalize the meaning of its form and
enclosing the old un-restored courtyard house
physical gesture.
at the back. On the other case, in Shanghai
Therefore, how could we restore the meaning
Xintiandi, the spatial organization within the old
and identity place / city, beyond the spectacle
historical housing is articulated and used for
of iconic building which have been employed
new commercial functions & activities.
in modern Asian cities for many decades? This
Looking at this new direction of Asian Cities
thesis attempts to explore and challenge this
which adopted the tabula rsa and collective
issue, by looking at the other polarity of society
memory for these past decades, with various
within the Shanghai metropolis; Urban Village
direction and interpretation, this thesis will
at the post-industrialized Suzhou Creek.
attempt to challenge both approaches. After tabula rasa and collective memory, what are the next approach should we envision for Asian Cities in its unique regional and The Wisma Dharmala by Paul Rudolf (Left), with the unique form inspired by pitch roof form of
historical context?
regional urban character of Jakarta (Right).
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process is influenced by mnemonic practice of
1.2 DESIGN METHODOLOGY:
personal or collective memory. Though
MNEMONIC PRACTICE
research of this area is usually conducted outside architecture discipline, and still speculative, however it offers a new corridor
Mnemonic is any learning technique that aids
for design thinking and methodology which is
memory. To improve long term memory,
significant for architectural theory and practice.
mnemonic systems are used to make memorization easier. Mnemonics rely on
Frank Gehry’s famous Bilbao museum is a
associations between easy-to-remember
sample of architectural expression which was
constructs which can be related back to the
influenced by Gehry’s personal memory and
data that is to be remembered. This is based
obsession to fish form, fluid, and sail’s
on the observation that the human mind much
surface.7 The fluid, iconic and sculptural form
more easily remembers spatial, personal,
is not necessarily derived from a rational
surprising, physical, sexual, humorous, or
design thinking / problem solving, but it’s
otherwise meaningful information, as
rather an evolution of Gehry exploration to fish
compared to retrieving arbitrary sequences.6
form and his personal memory of phenomenon of fluid, seas, sails and wind effects.
In this research context, I propose Mnemonic Practice as a design methodology to
Peter Eisenmann’s Memorial to the Murdered
investigate the phenomenology of vernacular
Jews of Europe in Berlin, is a monument which
and traditional environment, and to reconstruct
was designed as an attempt to reconstruct the
those memories into modern environment of
collective memory of the past tragedy. The
Hybrid Urban Village. Therefore, Mnemonic
array of massive concrete block with the
practice in this research is a thesis for design
sequences of paths and spatial narrative is a
methodology, which I believe is an important
form of mnemonic practice which represents
device to capture the phenomenon of physical
an important event in the past and registered
and transcendental dimension.
in the collective memory of the people.8
On the architectural practice, we could find example of several buildings of which design
6 Wikipedia 7 See Gehry Talks, Rizzoli, 1999, where Gehry himself explained his design process and thinking. 8 Nielsen, Kasper Lægring. Exploring the Mnemonic Dimension of Architecture through Recent Holocaust Memorials in Europe, 2007.
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In the urban context, I propose Shanghai as
1.3 THEORETICAL
the study case to examine the meaning of
PROPOSITION :
‘sense of place’ and identity in the middle of its
ABSTRACT REALITY
rapid transformation and social transition. Ruin, as the physical evidence of its
In investigating the vernacular and traditional
development and transformation, in my view is
environment versus the modern urban
a significant phenomenon which signify its
environment, I propose a theoretical
‘image of the city’. Among those ruins, urban
proposition of ‘abstract reality’ which captures
village appears as an interesting phenomena
the phenomenon of built environment including
which reveals the human resistance against
its intangible ‘abstract’ aspect which I believe
the deterioration and destruction of building
essential in constructing the unique sense of
physical elements due to aging process. And
place within many traditional environment.
to further understand this issue, I took a
The collection of ‘reading’ and investigation of
comparative study of dwelling of village in rural
this phenomenon are focusing on comparative
Shanghai and traditional Balinese village.
study of urban environment and traditional environment, of city and village, of global and regional: of Indonesia and China context. Indonesian Hindu temple in Java and Bali are among the objects of study which represent ancient, traditional and vernacular aspect. While Chinese Garden, is a parallel case study of Chinese culture which is significant to represent phenomenology in architecture.
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Ruin of Gedong Songo Temple, Central Java, Indonesia. (Left, Photo by author)
The Spatial organization of Balinese temple. The element of water & sound, aroma & smell, visual of ornaments and nature, tactility of material and natural phenomenon altogether compose the perception of place (Above, photo by author). The layers & illusion of space/ the formal dimension (Below, photo by author).
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Comparative study of perception and characteristic of Urban and Village .
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banks, a multitude of warehouses and
PART 2 : DESIGN
factories were built at this time, making the
INTERVENTION
region close to the river a significant industrial area. Later after Shanghai rapid urbanization and transformation, the industries were withdrew from urban center, left the
2.1 INTRODUCTION
warehouses and factories abandoned and creates several issues related to sustainability
2.1.1 Suzhou Creek
and conservation. The heavily polluted water
A 125km long river, originated from Lake Tai,
of Suzhou river, affected by industry and
cutting through the center of Shanghai
domestic waste water, has also become a
metropolis and flowing into the Huang Pu
major concern.
River at the northern end of prominent urban
Since 1992, Shanghai Municipal Government
promenade, The Bund, in Huang Pu district.
has been pursuing a redevelopment of the
The poetic memory, hope, and fantasy of
area. In 1998, authorities launched the Suzhou
Suzhou Creek as depicted in movie Suzhou
Creek Rehabilitation Project, a 12-year-
River 9, has become essential aspect of
program to improve the water quality, mitigate
Shanghai imageability10 and history. In the
flood impact, introduce wastewater and water
past, this 50m wide river has become a
resource management and push for urban
boundary separating different political
revitalization and a higher living standard in
influences throughout Shanghai’s history.
the desolated areas along Suzhou River. In the
In 1842 when Shanghai became international
meantime, Suzhou River is considered clean
trade port, the river formed the boundary
enough to host annual rowing competitions.
between the British concession (Southern bank) and the American settlement (Northern bank) until both concessions were merged into the International Settlement in 1863. In 1937, during the Japanese occupation, the river formed the boundary between the International Settlement (South) and the Japanese concession (North). As a major consequence of Shanghai development as international trading port, Suzhou Creek emerged as an important shipping route, facilitating the transport of goods into the interior of China. Along the river 9 Suzhou River ( , 2000) is a tragic love story movie set in contemporary Shanghai, directed by Lou Ye. 10 First coined by Kevin Lynch, the term refer to quality in a physical object which gives it a high probability of evoking a strong image in any given observer (The Image of The City, P9).
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Residential: old low rise typology, urban village
Residential: old low rise, row housing typology
Residential: private anting golf villas
Park: privatized marine park
Residential: private high rise apartment
Residential: private high rise apartment blocks
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82
Park and privatized residential; high rise
Privatized residential; medium to high rise
Agriculture
Industry
Promenade: confluence of two rivers
Form and pattern; density and tabula rasa
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problems. However, they are also among the
2.1.2 Urban Village
liveliest areas in some cities and are notable
Urban Village is an urban planning and urban
for affording economic opportunity to
design concept which refers to urban form,
newcomers to the city. 12
typically characterized by medium density development with mixed use zoning, provision
In Shanghai, the existence of urban village is
of good public transit, pedestrian and public
mainly related to social and economic issue
space. The ideas of the urban commentator
which can be traced back from the emergence
Jane Jacobs are widely regarded as having
of Modern Urban Housing process since
had the largest influence on the urban village
1840-1910. 13 In general there are three main
concept. Jacobs rejected the modernist views
groups of residents which determine the
that dominated urban planning and
polarization of urban housing and living
architecture in the 1950s-60s and constructed
condition. Based on occupation and income
an alternative philosophy that values traditional
level, they are divided into Upper Level, Middle
neighborhoods and the role of the inner city.
Level and Lower Level.14 This lower level of
Proponents believe that urban villages provide
group which will later form the cluster of urban
a viable alternative to the social ills that
village following the rapid urbanization and
characterize modernism in cities, such as
development. Since 1894 there were flow of
freeways and high-rise
estates.11
workers from mainly rural area to fill in the demand of occupation of the docks and
In this research we look at the urban village in
Chinese & foreign enterprises related to
China context which is different from the
industry, transportation and other public
previous meaning as influenced by Jacobs.
undertaking. Together within this flow were
Urban villages (Chinese: ;
people worked as carpenters, tailors,
literally:"village in city") are a unique
launderers, shop assistant, women servants
phenomenon that formed part of China’s
and clerks. All this group of people constituted
urbanization efforts. The villages appear on
a bulky working class at the lower level of
both the outskirts and the downtown segments
society. With the limited income which could
of major cities, including Beijing, Shenzhen
barely covered the basic living expenses, they
and Guangzhou. They are surrounded by
live in the extremely crude and simple living
skyscrapers, transportation infrastructures,
environment. They often occupied the low
and other modern urban constructions. Urban
standard worker houses built in the area with
villages are commonly inhabited by the poor
factory concentration or even form a slum
and transient, and as such they are associated with squalor, overcrowding and social
11 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_village 12 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Urban_village_(China) 13 See Chapter One: The Emergence of Modern Urban Housing (1840-1910); Lu Junhua, Modern Urban Housing in China, 1840-2000. 14 Ibid.
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which first appeared in late nineteenth century
translated into “workers new villages,” which
at Shanghai docks. 15
refer to the main housing settlements in urbanized Shanghai for mostly factory workers
From sociology point of view, a research
and their families from the 1950s through the
conducted by Prof. Xiaming Chen from
early 1980s. From the early 1990s, these
University of Illinois-Chicago,16 categorized
residential villages became a main destination
Shanghai neighborhood into 6 types;
for many lower-income people in the old urban
agricultural village, town center, urban
neighborhoods (type 4) displaced by rapid
residential village, old urban settlement, new
urban redevelopment in Shanghai.17
commercial housing complexes, and luxury flats & villas. Both agricultural village and town
Urban Village in this research mainly refers to
center are located at the boundary of
‘urban residential village’ and ‘old urban
Shanghai municipality. At the urban centre,
settlement’ which remain along the post-
urban residential village are the lowest
industrial area along the Suzhou Creek. These
hierarchy of living environment. The urban
Urban Villages are surviving in various
residential village in this categorization refers
condition; decayed, destroyed, desolated and
to original Chinese term gongren xincun,
entrapped among the new residential apartments and commercial towers.
15 Ibid. 16 “Untangling a global-local nexus:Sorting out residential sorting in Shanghai”, 2007. 17 Ibid.
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Monolith Hybrids-programmatic elements
2.2 HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE AS
being subsumed into a continuous envelope.18
A CATALYST FOR URBAN
As a common phenomenon in American cities,
REDEVELOPMENT
Hybrid Buildings were breed to accommodate the complexity of the programmatic
2.2.1 Proposed Site & Its Context
requirements in modern urban fabric. Recently,
The context of the project is situated on
the Linked-Hybrid by Steven Holl, in Beijing,
Suzhou Creek in Shanghai, a historical
has attempted to create a development which
territory within urban center which offers
act as porous urban fabric. The bridges--
problematic issue of nature and city, history
connected eight main towers--tie the complex
and future, post-industrialization and
program into a single hybrid building. However,
transformation which reflect instability or
this connectivity operates in the large scale
uncertainty.
which at the end acts as a new infrastructure
The proposed research site is located within
of the complex and yet does not necessarily
the Shanghai urban area at Changning district.
dissolve the spatial quality at the micro scale.
The site is an urban village (approximately 62,000 sqm) adjacent to the north side of Suzhou Creek, surrounded by complexity of
2.2.3 Hybrid Urban Village
modern infrastructure (3 metro lines) and
It has been clear that government has taken
roads, modern high rise apartment, historical
series of action and effort to mitigate and
site of former St. John’s University (now East
resolve the issue on Suzhou Creek. Those
China University of Political Science and Law),
actions can be summarized into four main
Public Zhong Shan Park, and commercial
steps;
blocks.
1. WATER. Started in 1992 (12 years program), dealing with several effort to improve the water quality, mitigate flood
2.2.2 Design Typology: Hybrid Building
impact, and introduce wastewater and water
The concept of hybridization originates from
resource management.
genetics and refers to the cross breeding of different species. In Architecture, definition of
2. CONSERVATION. Established heritage
hybrid building is associated with the
zone and warehouses conservation
programmatic requirement. In 1985, Joseph
initiatives(1990). Suzhou Creek Art district
Fenton categorized American Hybrid buildings
(Moganshan Road Art District).
into three main categories: Fabric Hybrids-
3. TABULA RASA. Old factories and
volumetric infill into the city’s gridded fabric;
abandoned warehouses are cleared for a new
Graft Hybrids-which express each program in
privatized development.
the resultant form of the hybrid building; and
18 Fenton, Joseph. ʻHybrid Buildingsʼ in Pamphlet of Architecture no.11.p7
16
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4. RIVER FRONT. River front development; 1
intervention to the existing urban village at the
square kilometer park & commercial
edge of Suzhou Creek which endures
structures.
resistance against the pressure of economic development, high land price and physical
The final proposed design for this research will
border (the river). The outcome of the design
be the 5th stage of Suzhou Creek Urban
is a general master plan of selected site which
Redevelopment (following the 4 series of
addresses the problematic urban issues, and
government action for urban redevelopment,
architectural conceptual proposal which is
dealing with Water, Conservation, Tabula
expected to become a project prototype to
Rasa, and River Front). It is a hybrid
envision large scale transformation at the
development comprising of housing, work
particular area.
place & market place, social space & public facility. The hybrid development is a proposed
The proposal: Hybrid Urban Village.
Government’s action on Suzhou Creek.
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MNEMONIC PRACTICE
18
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MNEMONIC PRACTICE
lamentation to the past but it should be equally
CONCLUSION
approached as a venture which could provide many practical solution to our complex urban and environmental issues, which cannot be Hybrid Urban Village as a catalyst for Suzhou
solved by current technological achievement.
Creek Urban Redevelopment is not a prescriptive solution to current complex
It is a paradox to ponder on the story of radical
urbanism issue in China and Shanghai in
Japanese writer Junichiro Tanizaki. In his In
particular. However it offers a new challenge
Praise of Shadows19, Tanizaki exposed the
for current architectural and design practice
essence of traditional Japanese house, space
which has been too much preoccupied by
and tradition which has been continuously
technological mean, dictated by formal
replaced by modern western influence. Most of
dimension and has asserted full control to
his lamentation and criticism to this transition
physical environment. This thesis attempt to
was later contrasted to his final comment
showcase an opposite condition where in fact,
which rejected to live in the traditional house of
there are many hidden meaning and values in
his own imagination, as shown in the story
other parts of our city, where dynamic change
below:
is possible, transcendental aspect is still
“Mrs. Tanizaki tells a story of when her late
important and yet they are part of meaningful
husband decided, as he frequently did, to build
identity of a city.
a new house. The architect arrived and
This thesis also encourage many radical
announced with pride, “I’ve read your In Praise
attempt to explore and reinterpret traditional
of Shadows, Mr. Tanizaki, and know exactly
and vernacular values of many diverse Asian
what you want.” To which Tanizaki replied, “But
Cultures into modern urban context. These
no, I could no longer live in a house like
efforts should not be seen solely as a
that.”20
19 Tanizaki, Junichiro. In Praise of Shadows. 1977 20 Ibid., p 48.
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20
MNEMONIC PRACTICE Architecture. San Francisco, William Stout Publisher, 2006. Koolhaas, Rem. S,M,L,XL. New York, The Monacelli Press, 1998. Leach, Neil. Rethinking Architecture, A Reader in Cultural Theory. Routledge, 2010. Lefaivre, Liane and Alexander Tzonis. Architecture of Regionalism in the Age of Globalization; Peaks and Valleys in the Flat World. Routledge, 2012. Li Xiaodong and Zhuang Qinghua. Form-making in Traditional Chinese Architecture. Beijing, China Architectural Press, 2010. Loos, Adolf. Ornament and Crime, Selected Essays. Riverside, California, Ariadne Press, 1998. Merleau-Ponty, Maurice. Phenomenology of Perception. Routledge, 2002. Nesbitt, Kate. Theorizing a New Agenda for Architecture, an Anthology of Architectural Theory 1965-1995. Princeton Architectural Press, 1996. Oliver, Paul. Dwellings: The Vernacular House Worldwide. Phaidon, 2003. Oswald, Franz and Peter Baccini. Netzstadt. Birkhauser, 2003. Perez-Gomez, Alberto. Built Upon Love; Architectural Longing After Ethics and Aesthetics. MIT Press, 2008. Perez-Gomez, Alberto. Architecture and the Crisis of Modern Science. MIT Press, 1990. Rossi, Aldo. The Architecture of the City. The MIT Press, 1984. Sassen, Saskia. Territory, Authority, Rights: From Medieval to Global Assemblages. New York, Princeton University Press, 2008. Wu Liangyong. Rehabilitating The Old City of Beijing; A project in the Ju’er Hutong Neighbourhood. Vancouver, UBC Press, 1999. Zumthor, Peter. Atmospheres: Architectural Environments - Surrounding Objects. Birkhäuser Architecture, 2006. Zumthor, Peter.Thinking Architecture . Birkhäuser Architecture, 2010.
Bibliography: Busquets, Joan. Cities X Lines, A New Lens For Urbanistic Project. Hustpas, Beijing, 2010. Certeau, Michel de. The Practice of Everyday Life. University of California Press, 1988. C h e n , Ya w e i . S h a n g h a i P u d o n g , U r b a n Development In An Era of Global-local Interaction. TU Delft, 2007. Cook, Peter. The City Seen As A Garden. The Monacelli Press, 2003. Ellin, Nan. Postmodern Urbanism. Princeton Architectural Press, 1999. Fingerhuth, Carl. Learning from China, the Tao of the City. Birkhauser, 2004. Jacobs, Jane. The Death and Life of Great American Cities. Modern Library, 2011. Koolhas, Rem. Mutations: Harvard Project in the City. Barcelona, Actar 2000. Lefebvre, Henri. Writings on Cities. Oxford: Blackwell,1996. Lim, William Siew Wai. Asian Alterity, With Special Reference to Architecture + Urbanism Through the Lens of Cultural Studies. World Scientific Publishing, 2008. Liu Wujun & Huang Xiang. Shanghai Urban Planning. Cengage Learning Asia Pte Ltd, 2007. Lu Junhua, Peter G. Rowe and Zhang Jie. Modern Urban Housing in China, 1840-2000. Prestel, 2001. Lynch, Kevin. Good City Form. Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press 1981. Lynch, Kevin. The Image of The City. Cambridge, Mass, MIT Press 1960. Maki, Fumihiko. Nurtuting Dreams, Collected Essays on Architecture and The City. MIT Press, 2008. Marshall, Stephen. Streets and Patterns. Routledge, 2004. Michelis, Stani and Arjan Van Helmond. Jakarta Megalopolis, Horizontal and Vertical Observations. Valiz, Amsterdam, 2007. MVRDV, T?F. The Vertical Village; Individual, Informal, Intense. NAi Publishers, 2012. Rowe, Peter G. Modernity and Housing. MIT, 1993. Spirn, Anne Whiston. The Granite Garden: Urban Nature and Human Design. New York: Basic Books, 1984. Sudjic, Deyan. The Edifice Complex, How the Rich and Powerful Shape the World. New York, The Penguin Press, 2005. Calinescu, Matei. Five Faces of Modernity. Duke University Press Durham, 2007. Fenton, Joseph. ʻHybrid Buildingsʼ in Pamphlet of Architecture no.11. Princeton Architectural Press, 1985. Frampton, Kenneth. Modern Architecture, A Critical History. Thames and Hudson, 2007. Grima, Joseph. Instant Asia: Fast Forward Through The Architecture of a Changing Continent. Skira, 2008. Holl, Steven, Juhani Pallasmaa, Alberto PerezGomez. Question of Perception, Phenomenology of
Chen, Xiangming and Jiaming Sun. Untangling a global-local nexus: Sorting out residential sorting in Shanghai. In Press at Environment and Planning A (2007). a+t, Hybrids 1, High-Rise Mixed use Buildings, a+t ediciones, 2008. a+t, Hybrids 1, Low-Rise Mixed use Buildings, a+t ediciones, 2008.
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MNEMONIC PRACTICE:
HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE AS RECONSTRUCTION OF MEMORY OF PLACES M.ARCH THESIS AT TSINGHUA UNIVERSITY, MAY 2012 PERSONAL ACADEMIC WORK
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HYBRID BUILDINGS
HYBRID BUILDINGS BY JOSEPH FENTON (Pamphlet Architecture no.11)
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PROPOSAL HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE
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S T R A T E G Y 5 PRINCILPES
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F R A M E W O R K
HISTORICAL REALM Historical site of former St. John’s University (now East China University of Political Science and Law)offers a unique environment to the public through its eclectic architectural styles and park.
PUBLIC PARK Zhong Shan Park is one of the oldest public park in Shanghai. It has diverse landscape & garden styles, spaces and natural elements.
TRANSPORTATION The village is flanked by 3 metro lines,which is connected to the international airport and railways. The urban village and Suzhou Creek is directed to be accessible by bicycle and foot.
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HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE
CONNECTIVITY
The proposed Hybrid Urban Village is reconstructed by local resident through incremental process by utilizing available material & technology; and maintaining existing spatial organization (street pattern) which characterizes its unique environment.
Connectivity to Urban Village is regulated by three bridges. First bridge connects the periphery (public street) of Urban Village to public road and community across the river. Second bridge connects the internal road of Urban Village to the Green Space of Former Saint John’s University. The existing bridge connect the old part of university to its extension across the river. This bridge also gives limited access to public (who live inside or next to Urban Village).
PERIPHERY OF URBAN VILLAGE
exsisting
2
1
INTERIOR URBAN VILLAGE
1
PROPOSED
HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE
2
drainage, overflow tank & pump
drainage, overflow tank & pump
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OPERATION & REGULATION
main route
social space (market place, neighborhood)
new meandering route
ruin (ambiguous space, playground) public green space (park, garden, courtyard)
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BUILDINGS
FAR = 2.5 TOTAL GFA 156,965 SQM (PROPOSED HEIGHT 4-5 FLOORS) MAXIMUM HEIGHT OF FIRST ROW BUILDING FROM RIVER EDGE 30M
GREEN AREA
TARGETED PUBLIC GREEN COVERAGE 38% (23,858 SQM) CURRENT GREEN AREA 19,012 SQM
STREET PATTERN
URBAN VILLAGE INTERNAL CIRCULATION, ACCESSIBLE BY BICYCLE & FOOT URBAN VILLAGE PERIPHERY, ACCESSIBLE BY PUBLIC VEHICLES
SITE AREA
TOTAL AREA = 62,786 SQM
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PROJECT SITE SETTING & CONTEXT
BRIDGES
AVERAGE RIVER WIDTH 40-50M 1 EXISTING & 2 PROPOSED BRIDGES
SUZHOU CREEK
BUILDING SETBACK LINE: NORTH SIDE 30M FROM RIVER EDGE SOUTH SIDE 20M FROM RIVER EDGE FIRST ROW BUILDING HEIGHT: NORTH SIDE 30M SOUTH SIDE 26M NORTH
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University extension
Private Residential Development (Gated Community)
EXISTING BRIDGE Former St.John’s University
PROPOSED BRIDGE 2
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PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL TOWER
SITE SECTION
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL TOWER
FORMER ST.JOHN’S UNIVERSITY
APARTMENT BLOCK PROPOSED BRIDGE NEW PUBLIC WATERFRONT
SUZHOU CREEK
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HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE
APARTMENT BLOCK
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THE LANDMARK TOWER (MIXED DEVELOPMENT)
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL TOWER
PROPOSED BRIDGE 1
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PROPOSED BRIDGE 2
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CONCEPTUAL DESIGN MODEL
AN ENVIRONMENT ESTABLISHED UPON FORMAL AND TRANSCENDENTAL DIMENSION, REPRESENTED BY: Natural Landscape ( Park & Garden) / Transcendental Realm Historical Artifacts & Spatial Construct (Memory) / Cultural Realm Ruin & Reconstruction (Physical)/ Formal Realm
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HYBRID HOUSE 1
HYBRID HOUSE 2
THE SURVIVING RUIN
TWO TYPES OF EXISTING HOUSES ARE PROPOSED TO BE RECONSTRUCTED INTO HYBRID HOUSES.
HYBRID HOUSE 1
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THE SURVIVING RUIN
TWO TYPES OF EXISTING HOUSES ARE PROPOSED TO BE RECONSTRUCTED INTO HYBRID HOUSES.
HYBRID HOUSE 2
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HYBRID HOUSE 1
5 BLOCKS MIXED FUNCTIONS = 257.5 SQM ESTIMATED CAPACITY: RESIDENT 11 PERSONS / 5 FAMILIES, 3 WORKING PERSONS, 10 VISITORS
ORIGINAL BLOCK (MODIFIED) LIVING SPACE: (33 SQM) 1 UNIT BEDROOM 1 TOILET 1 LIVING ROOM
ORIGINAL BLOCK LIVING SPACE: (33 SQM) FOR FAMILY /ELDERLY 2 UNITS BEDROOM 1 TOILET 1 KITCHEN 1 LIVING ROOM
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ADDITIONAL BLOCK LIVING SPACE: (46.5 SQM) 3 UNIT BEDROOM 1 COMMON TOILET 1 COMMON KITCHEN + BALCONY / LAUNDRY SPACE 1 COMMON LIVING ROOM
ELEVATED BLOCK WORK SPACE / COMMERCIAL SPACE: (19 SQM)
ORIGINAL BLOCK (MODIFIED) COMMERCIAL SPACE: (63 SQM) Upper Floor 32 sqm Lower Floor 31 sqm
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HYBRID HOUSE 1 Hybrid House 1 is divided into five blocks. It comprises of spaces for economic activities (shops, food court, service, etc), working space (office, workshop, etc) and living spaces for various types of family & temporary resident.
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secondary route
primary route
WORK SPACE
19 sqm elevated block, offer a flexible space for multi purpose working/ economic avtivities
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COMMERCIAL SPACE
63 sqm space for economic activities (shops, food court, service, etc).
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MEP shafts A/C Ledge
3
1 2
balcony/ laundry
LIVING SPACE
3 blocks living spaces for various types of family & temporary resident.
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HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE
HYBRID HOUSE 1 + HYBRID HOUSE 2 + MANY OTHER HYBRID HOUSES
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Ground Floor Plan
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First Floor Plan
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Second Floor Plan
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Third Floor Plan
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Fourth Floor Plan
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Roof Top Plan
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POETIC TECTONIC
TECTONIC QUALITY & EXPRESSION WITHIN URBAN VILLAGE AND ITS ADJACENT SURROUNDING
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HYBRID URBAN VILLAGE
(A CATALYST FOR SUZHOU CREEK URBAN REDEVELOPMENT) THE VILLAGE EVOLVE AS A NODES OF URBAN SPACES ALONG THE CONTINUOUS GREEN CORRIDOR, CONNECTING SUZHOU RIVER TO THE HUANGPU RIVER.
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landscape architecture
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PEACE GARDEN RESIDENTIAL
SHANGHAI, CHINA
BUILT PROJECT, 2004 PROFESSIONAL WORK: LANDSCAPE DESIGNER, LANDART, SHANGHAI
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JUNHUA URBAN REDEVELOPMENT ZHONGHAN, GUANGZHOU
INITIAL CONTEPTUAL PLANNING & ANALYSIS, 2012 PROFESSIONAL WORK: URBAN DESIGNER, RTKL INTERNATIONAL, BEIJING
TYPOLOGY TYPOLOGY & SPATIAL & SPATIAL CHARACTER CHARACTER ACTIVE WATER-BODY ACTIVE WATER-BODY
RIVER
80-150m
RIVER
80-150m
WATER EDGE PARK WATER EDGE PARK 20-80m
20-80m
100-300m
100-300m
LOW RISE LOW RISE LINEAR BLOCK LINEAR BLOCK LOW RISE LINEAR LOW BLOCK RISE LINEAR BLOCK
TOWER BLOCK TOWER BLOCK
TOWER BLOCK TOWER BLOCK + + PODIUM & COURTYARD PODIUM & COURTYARD
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New Residential Development. Highrise Tower.
Established Community. Lowrise residential in pattern responding to topography. Existing Community. Industrial buildings with lowrise residential scattered around them. Stripe of houses along the river bank Existing Community. Industrial buildings (east side) with lowrise residential in grid pattern. Facility: school
Potential Microsoft Headquarter
Existing development. Lowrise buildings & office/industry blocks.
Existing community with farmland.
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Figure B
Public recreational facility: playground, museum, clubhouse, recreation center.
Recreational ‘water park’
New residential development. High rise development, with some landmark tower at the junction. New residential development. Mid to low rise development, creating a continous visibility to the park and river.
Public Facility: community center & service (gym, adminsitration, auditorium & hall,etc)
Mixed development: Creative Industry, retail shops, hotel, commercial block. Adaptive reuse, with several new low rise block creating a continous visibility to the park and river.
‘The Central’ Mixed development with iconic building / landmark. (Service apartment, restaurant, commerical podium, hotel & office)
PRODUCTION QUARTER
INSTITUTION QUARTER Green hill
Figure A Mixed development with iconic building / landmark. (Service apartment, restaurant, commerical podium, hotel & office)
RECREATION & CREATIVE INDUSTRY QUARTER
New residential development. Low rise villas with natural pattern surrounding the hill New residential development. Low rise villas & (cluster of resort), with public green space along the river, and infrastrucutre connecting two pieces of development
Potential Microsoft Headquarters
Mixed development comprises of healthcare facility (hospital), commercial block, office and hotel.
Education center. Mid to High school education, or special institute dedicated to support industry in the city.
Public Facility: (To support or related to education such as exhibition center, museum & library) New residential development. Low rise villas.
B. Relationship of Institution and Production quarter
A. Mixed Development
Education
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Facility
Residential
Business
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NATIONAL STATE GRID HEADQUARTERS TIANJIN, CHINA
INITIAL CONTEPTUAL PLANNING & DESIGN, 2012 PROFESSIONAL WORK: URBAN DESIGNER, RTKL INTERNATIONAL, BEIJING
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GUANGYANG PEACOCK CITY GUANGYANG, CHINA
CONCEPTUAL PLANNING & DESIGN, NEW TOWN DEVELOPMENT PROFESSIONAL WORK: URBAN DESIGNER, RTKL INTERNATIONAL, BEIJING
RESIDENTIAL LOW RISE
RESIDENTIAL MEDIUM RISE
RESIDENTIAL TOWER
COMMERCIAL & PUBLIC SERVICE
GUANGYANG PEACOCK CITY
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HAIKOU URBAN REGENERATION XIUYING PORT, HAIKOU, CHINA
CONTEPTUAL PLANNING & DESIGN, 2012 PROFESSIONAL WORK: URBAN DESIGNER, RTKL INTERNATIONAL, BEIJING
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Urbanization has put increasing demand on China’s second and third tier cities to improve the quality of life for its citizens. The regeneration of city centers and adjacent industrial zones is one of the solutions. Xiuying Port is an old logistics port in the center of Haikou, China. Under the new positioning of Hainan as an International Tourism Island, Haikou as the provincial capital of Hainan faces challenges and competition from Sanya in the south. The port is being relocated and regenerated into a new mixed use hub. The biggest challenge is to find adequate land budget and FAR to make the relocation of port possible. The client and government leaders envision the site as a mixed use development with entertainment uses including marina facilities, local ferry port, office uses, customs and port uses, and high end apartments.
Hainan University
New Port Port
Downtown
Park
Resort SITE
22km to airport
SOLVE
The port regeneration will be a catalyst project for the revival of Haikou’s city center. Economically the waterfront site near Haikou city center will have an appropriate mix of uses to attract investment capital. Our aim to develop an eco healthy district on this reclaimed industrial site is achieved by providing an interconnected green infrastructure system and implementing a green approach to limit impact on the urban environment. Social sustainability is achieved by creating a district to live, work, and play, attracting people to Haikou to enjoy the harbor life.
Xiuying Port &Haikou, Hainan Province HAIKOU
HAIKOU
Wenchang Danzhou
Wenchang
Qionghai
Danzhou
Dongfang
CONNECT
Wanning
Wuzhishan
Urban design is not just about the design of buildings, but also about creating linkages through the spatial fabric and public realm. Our aim in this urban regeneration project is to connect Haikou’s past with future, connect the site with the city, connect urban development with economic prosperity, connect people with other people and places, and connect the sea with the land.
SANYA
Qionghai
HAIKOU
Wenchang
Wuzhishan
Danzhou Qionghai
EXPLORE
Dongfang
To test our vision for the design, a series of studies on waterfront developments, including pioneer projects in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor and Hamburg Haffen City, have been carried out in order to find the most appropriate development path for Xiuying Port. Energy and wind models were used as an experimental way to test the “physical” quality of the design, and to adjust the design to optimize environmental comfort with efficient energy utilization.
ENRICH
The project aims to energize the city center with a waterfront destination to stimulate the cities’ vitality and accelerate the port’s transition from industrial to commercial uses, focus value and presence on the waterfront, and offer a mix of active landscape typologies located in pedestrian scaled urban environments which will promote walkability, thus reducing the impact of vehicular traffic on the urban infrastructure.
Wanning
Wuzhishan
SANYA
SANYA
To support Hainan as an International Tourism Island, Haikou can create an identity distinct from Sanya in the south. GUANGXI Beihai
GUANGXI
Guiyang
Kunming
Guangxi
GUANGDONG
Zhongshan
GUANGDONG
VIETNAM
Zhuhai
Guangzhou
Myanmar
Macau
Qingzhou
Zhanjiang Hai Pong
Yangjiang
Hongkong
Beihai
Maoming Zhanjiang
Hainan
Xiuying Port Leizhou
Thailand
Xuwen
Vietnam Lingao
Cambodia
Danzhou
Haikou
Qionghai Dongfang
Danzhou
Wenchang
Wangning
HAINAN
Malaysia
Sanya Wanning
Singapore
Sanya
Haikou’s strategic location within Hainan and Southeast Asia provides opportunities to influence regional development.
01
HAIKOU XIUYING PORT DEVELOPING AN INDUSTRIAL PORT INTO A HARBOR CITY
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Exhibition Rental Mooring
Residential
8,000 units
Employment
40,000 employees
Commercial Population
475,000 sqm 15,000 residents
Recreational Residential
220,000 sqm 8,000 units
Public Service Employment
43,500 sqm 40,000 employees
Yacht Dock Commercial
300 berths 475,000 sqm
Port Relocation Recreational
¥ 8.2 billion 220,000 sqm
Public Service
43,500 sqm
Yacht Dock
Resecue 300 berths
INDUSTRY PortYACHT Relocation
SEA TOURISM Exhibition Rental Harbor Mooringcruise, Water sports YACHT INDUSTRY
Customs Maritime services Conferencing
PUBLIC SERVICE
¥ 8.2 billion
SHORT DISTANCE FERRY SEA TRANSPORTATION Customs Maritime services Passenger Resecue jet boat to cross Jingzhou Strait Conferencing Seaplane PUBLIC SERVICE
XIUYING PORT’S FUNCTIONS
02
URBAN REGENERATION
Xuiying Port is planned to accommodate four major public functions: SHORT DISTANCEand short distance yacht industry, public service, sea tourism SEA TOURISM FERRY SEA ferry transportation. This strategy is expected to boost economic TRANSPORTATION development by creating a dynamic workforce for 40,000 employees Passenger jet boat to Harbor cruise, and attract adequate investment for implementing the development. cross Jingzhou Strait Water sports Seaplane
XIUYING PORT’S FUNCTIONS Xuiying Port is planned to accommodate four major public functions: yacht industry, public service, sea tourism and short distance ferry transportation. This strategy is expected to boost economic development by creating a dynamic workforce for 40,000 employees and attract adequate investment for implementing the development.
INTEGRATE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC & ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
02
URBAN REGENERATION
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL OFFICE
CULTURAL ENTERTAINMENT
TRANSPORTATION
ENVIRONMENTALLY PROTECTED
URBAN MIXED USE
HISTORIC
INTEGRATE SOCIAL, ECONOMIC & ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY
Waterfront Development Typologies
URBAN MIXED USE WATERFRONT At the project onset, we studied existing waterfront development typologies and models around the world to determine Xiuying Port’s development path. Based on the studies and in keeping with the government’s vision, Xiuying Port will be CULTURAL URBAN COMMERCIAL ENVIRONMENTALLY RESIDENTIALas an Urban developed Mixed Use Waterfront. This typeTRANSPORTATION of waterfront development integrates various waterfront typologies HISTORIC ENTERTAINMENT MIXED USE OFFICE PROTECTED to create a vibrant, multifunctional destination for residents, employees, and tourists. The waterfront promenade becomes an important public element that connects people and places. Waterfront Development Typologies
CHALLENGE & OPPORTUNITY
Land Use
URBAN MIXED USE WATERFRONT
STRATEGY & NEWdevelopment PROGRAM typologies and models around the world to determine At the project onset, we studied existing waterfront Xiuying Port’s development path. Based on the studies and in keeping with the government’s vision, Xiuying Port will be FUTUREintegrates REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT • Favorable location to Use Waterfront. This type of waterfront development developed as an Urbanclose Mixed various waterfront typologies the mainland to create a vibrant, multifunctional destination for residents, employees, and tourists. The waterfront promenade becomes an• important element that• connects and Mixed usepeople program of places. • Catalyst to stimulate urban Supportivepublic national, regional, and local governmental policies
CHALLENGE & OPPORTUNITY
commercial, entertainment, port, and residential uses
regeneration developments in Haikou city center
• Seafront advantages with protected inner harbor
• Transit hub with access to land and sea transportations
• Mixed use waterfront destination, attracting locals and tourists
• Lack of cultural response and distinctive feature • Favorable location close to mainland • the Insuffi cient infrastructure
• Waterfront promenade to connect public spaces
• Yacht hub with marina and related services to serve a growing market
and public facility • Supportive national, regional, and local governmental policies
• New infrastructure & facility to accommodate residents, • Mixed use program of commuters, and tourists commercial, entertainment, port, and residential uses
• A node for local and regional water transportation • Catalyst to stimulate urban regeneration developments in Haikou city center
• Seafront advantages with protected inner harbor
• Transit hub with access to land and sea transportations
• Mixed use waterfront destination, attracting locals and tourists
• Lack of cultural response and distinctive feature
• Waterfront promenade to connect public spaces
• Yacht hub with marina and related services to serve a growing market
Land Use
STRATEGY & NEW PROGRAM
FUTURE REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
Master Plan
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architecture
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SOHO ISLAND SUZHOU, CHINA
BUILT PROJECT, 2006 PROFESSIONAL WORK: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER, HMA ARCHITECTS & DESIGNERS, SHANGHAI
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architecture
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GUANGZHOU EAST TOWER GUANGZHOU, CHINA
COMPETITION, 2009 PROFESSIONAL WORK: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER, SPARCH, SINGAPORE
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architecture
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PROJECT SUGARCANE HO CHI MINH CITY, VIETNAM
COMPETITION 1ST PRIZE, 2009 PROFESSIONAL WORK: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGNER, SPARCH, SINGAPORE
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project data: SPARCH 2009, owned by Capitaland, principal/design architect Stephen Pimbley, 1st prize winner site area 10,000sqm, GFA 100,000sqm, program Commercial, Service Apartment, Residential & Clubhouse
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www.ishenstudio.com ishenstudio@yahoo.com