An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection

Flag black

Press kit - Press release - An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio


A v2com exclusive

An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection

Huangpu Qu, China

Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio

Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio complete T20 in Xujiahui


Paris, France, 2019-06-11 –

Paris, Lisbon and Shanghai-based practices Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio have turned what could have been an ordinary ‘office plus car park’ into an opportunity to radically reassess the surrounding urban district of Xujiahui in Shanghai.

  • A radical reimagining of a densely urban site on Shanghai busiest intersection
  • The project features elevated planted pedestrian walkways above the street 
  • An ‘urban oasis’ from which to observe the dynamic scene below

The resulting structure, on the site of a former hotel, combines office, civic, commercial and cultural space with green ribbons of public walkways, connecting the streets and buildings of China’s busiest intersection with peaceful arteries from which to escape the tumult.

The design explored ways in which the project could become a generous catalyst for the wider environment, building pedestrian connections, walkways and bridges above the transport interchange as an extension of the building; in doing so, renewing the local infrastructure. Through extensive analysis, Jacques Ferrier, founder of Jacques Ferrier Architecture, and Pauline Marchetti, co-founder of Sensual City Studio, identified the need for enhanced pedestrian connectivity at the intersection and incorporated this into the building’s car park. The radical intervention creates raised and planted walkways which lift pedestrians eight metres above the crossroads to provide more logical and enjoyable connectivity between city landmarks such as the church and the park.

 

The project includes two levels of commercial space underground, one of which is connected to the Metro City building by an underground gallery. Floors 1 and 2 house several hundred square meters of community spaces. Floors 3 to 7 house the public car park, which unfolds in the form of a continuous spiral, serving the offices and businesses of the district. The 8th and 9th floors are shared office space arranged around a large raised garden, and house a reception for visitors, cafeteria, meeting rooms, auditorium and spaces for relaxation and conviviality. Levels 10 to 15 have been developed as efficient and user-friendly office floors. The top two floors are home to the cultural centre, space that seemingly “floats” on the skyline of the district.

 

As a piece of architecture, T20 expresses the movement and dynamism inherent in the site: its circulation and activation through human use, across the bridges that connect to the city and at ground and first floor level where public facilities and shops are located. The car park becomes a lush urban oasis for the city, with the insertion of an extraordinary “hanging garden” that is visible from key public spaces.

 

This combined approach by Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio has brought nature into even this most densely populated area, through suspended gardens and plantings throughout the scheme which will help to counteract some of the inevitable pollution in the area. Balancing dynamic movement and respite, the building reintroduces therapeutic nature into the urban condition by offering a garden to the city in this intriguing layered approach to city architecture.

Key Facts

•  Location: Shanghai [China]

•  Architects: Jacques Ferrier Architecture (JFA) with Sensual City Studio (SCS)

•  Client: Shanghai Xujiahui Commercial Real Estate Development Co, Ltd.

•  Completion: 2019

•  Area: 215,000 square feet (20,000 square meters)

•  Use: Commercial

About Jacques Ferrier Architecture (JFA)
JFA is an international architecture practice specializing in urban planning and high-quality,
contemporary architecture. Founded in 1993 by Jacques Ferrier, the award winning
practice was one of the first specialists in sustainability in Paris with portfolio spanning a variety of sectors including cultural, leisure, commercial, education and infrastructure.

The practice is currently working on the redevelopment of Saint Lazare station in
Paris, with a façade inspired by the impressionist paintings of Claude Monet. Other key projects include the regeneration of the Xiya Hotel in the Xujiahui district Shanghai; Aqualagon Water Park in Paris; Hachette Livre in Vanves; the higher education research establishment Collège de France in Paris; Headquarters for the Métropole Rouen Normandie and the French International School of Beijing in China.

About Sensual City Studio (SCS)
Founded by Pauline Marchetti and Jacques Ferrier Architecture in 2010, Sensual City
Studio sees each urban situation as an opportunity to explore a conceptual framework based on the way that people inhabit the city of tomorrow. The starting
point is to examine current and potential future ways of living, working, travelling and consuming in the city. The main aim, prior to designing any forms, is to create an environment that permits diversity and changing uses, and to incorporate these into
a specific geography and historical context.
Sensual City Studio is a project that answers the urgent question of what urban planning should be both today and tomorrow. The urban culture developed in the 20th century is steadily expanding and over half the world’s population now lives in
cities, a proportion that is continually increasing and causing functional problems on
an unprecedented scale.


– 30 –
Media contact

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Jonathan Leijonhufvud

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Jonathan Leijonhufvud


~

52 MB

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly


~

820 KB

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly


~

910 KB

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly


~

900 KB

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Jonathan Leijonhufvud

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Jonathan Leijonhufvud


~

57 MB

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly


~

1 MB

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly


~

860 KB

Press kit | 1799-03 - Press release | An urban oasis on Shanghai’s busiest intersection - Jacques Ferrier Architecture and Sensual City Studio - Commercial Architecture - Photo credit:  Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly

Photo credit:
Jacques Ferrier Architecture / Photo Luc Boegly


~

890 KB





Source link

Save This Post
ClosePlease login

No account yet? Register

Up Next

RECOMMENDED