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MAD completes "Chaoyang Park Plaza" creating the impression of an ink landscape on Beijing’s skyline

China Architecture News - Dec 05, 2017 - 14:15   20727 views

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MAD Architects, led by Ma Yansong, has completed the Chaoyang Park Plaza in Beijing, which includes the Armani apartment complex. Inspired by by traditional Chinese landscape paintings, MAD's design remodels the relationship of large-scale architecture within our urban centers.

Reflected through fluid forms and mountainous-looking volumes in the city context, the newly-completed building was captured by architectural photographers Hufton+Crow, showing every detail, building's texture, materiality and interior views from every perspective.

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Situated on the southern edge of Beijing's Chaoyang Park - the largest remaining park in Beijing's central business district area - the 220,000-square-metre complex includes 10 buildings which unfold as a classic Shanshui painting on an urban scale. 

Having a similar position and function as Central Park in Manhattan, but unlike the modern box-like buildings that only create a separation between the park and the city, "Chaoyang Park Plaza" instead is an expansion of nature. 

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"It is an extension of the park into the city, naturalizing the CBD’s strong artificial skyline, borrowing scenery from a distant landscape - a classical approach to Chinese garden architecture, where nature and architecture blend into one another," said MAD.

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The complex introduces natural forms and spaces - "mountain, brook, creek, rocks, valley and forest" - into the city. The asymmetrical twin tower office buildings on the north side of the site, sit at the base of the park’s lake and are like two mountain peaks growing out of the water. The transparent and bright atrium acts like a "drawstring" that pulls the two towers together by a connecting glass rooftop structure. 

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"In modern cities, architecture as an artificial creation is seen more as a symbol of capital, power or technological development; while nature exists independently," said architect Ma Yansong, founder and director of MAD.

"It is different from traditional Eastern cities where architecture and nature are designed as a whole, creating an atmosphere that serves to fulfill one’s spiritual pursuits."

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"We want to blur the boundary between nature and the artificial, and make it so that both are designed with the other in mind. Then, the argument in the modern logic of humans to protect or to destroy nature will no longer exist if we understand and see humans and nature as co-existing. Human behavior and emotion is part of nature, and nature is where that originates and ends,"  Yansong added.

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The small-scale, low-rise commercial buildings appear as mountain rocks that have endured long-term erosion. They seem to be randomly placed, but their strategic relationship to one another forms a secluded, but open urban garden, offering a place where people can meet within nature in the middle of the city.

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The two multi-story Armani apartments to the southwest continue this concept of "open air living" with their staggered balconies, offering each residential unit more opportunities to be exposed to natural sunlight, and ultimately feel a particular closeness to nature.

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The overall environment is shaped by smooth, curved surfaces of black and white, creating a quiet and mysterious atmosphere. It is one that evokes the emotion and aesthetic resonance of a traditional Chinese ink painting, creating a tranquil escape from the surrounding, bustling urban environment. 

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The landscape that weaves itself in between the buildings incorporates pine trees, bamboo, rocks and ponds - all traditional Eastern landscape elements that imply a deeper connection between the architecture and classical space. Japanese graphic artist Kenya Hara led the design of the "simple"and "refined" signage system for the project.

The project has been awarded the LEED Gold Certification by the US Green Building Council, as the ideal of "nature" is not only embodied in the design concept, but in the innovation and integration of green technology as well. The vertical fins seen on the exterior glass façade emphasize the smoothness and verticality of the towers. 

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They also function as the energy efficient ventilation and filtration system, drawing fresh air indoors. At the base of the towers, there is a pond, that while making them appear as if they are going into infinity, works as an air cooling system in the summer, decreasing the overall temperature of the interior.

"Chaoyang Park Plaza" completely transforms the model of building found in our cities’ central business districts. But even though it is located in the center of Beijing’s CBD, the intention is for it to have a dialogue with the traditional and classical city of Beijing - reflecting the interdependence between man and nature, both in urban planning, and the large-scale presentation of the Shanshui garden. 

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Painting by Wang Mingxian, courtesy of MAD

In the painting of Wang Mingxian, an architectural historian, he juxtaposed "Chaoyang Park Plaza" into a classical landscape painting. The architecture and the natural scenery seemed harmonious together, unlike how some might think the buildings do not fit into their urban context. 

Commenting on this contrast, Ma Yansong said: "I don’t think that’s our problem. The real question is when did the original cultural context of this city disappear? We have the opportunity to try and create a different kind of city, that on a spiritual and cultural level, can be compared to the classical cities of Eastern philosophy and wisdom."

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Image courtesy of MAD

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Longitudinal section

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MAD recently completed the Huangshan Village in China inspired by the topographic lines of a mountainous terrain. The studio is currently working on Faraday Future’s sci-fi-looking campus on Mare island, in Northern California adjacent to the Napa River. 

Project facts

Project name: Chaoyang Park Plaza
Location: Beijing, China
Date: 2012-2017

Typology: Office, Commercial, Residential
Site Area: 30,763 sqm
Building Area: Aboveground 128,177 sqm, Belowground 94,832 sqm
Building Height: 142 m

Principal Partners in Charge: Ma Yansong, Dang Qun, Yosuke Hayano
Associate Partners in Charge: Kin Li, Liu Huiying
Team: Fu Changrui, Zhao Wei, Li Guangchong, Lin Guomin, Bennet Hu Po-Kang, Nathan Kiatkulpiboone, Yang Jie, Julian Sattler, Younjin Park, Zhu Jinglu, Xue Yan, Zheng Fang, Matteo Vergano, Wing Lung Peng, Gustavo Maya, Li Yunlong, Tiffany Dahlen, Gustaaf Alfred Van Staveren

Client: Smart-hero (HK) Investment Development Limited
Executive Architects: CCDI Group
Façade Consultant: RFR Asia
Interior Design: MADA s.p.a.m.
Graphic Design: Kenya Hara + NDC China
Landscape Design: Greentown Akin Landscape Architecture Co., Ltd.
Interior Lighting Consultant: M&W Lighting Limited
Landscape Lighting Consultant: Beijing Junhao Lighting Design Co., Ltd
LEED Certification Consultant: Shenzhen Institute of Building Research Co., Ltd.

All images © Hufton+Crow unless otherwise stated

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