In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis

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© Morphosis

Morphosis Architects is currently completing a massive project in : The Headquarters and offices for Giant Group, including residence for the chairman & all Giant Group employees, hotel, training center and clubhouse, with a total of 258,300 sqf (23,996 sqm).

Thom Mayne’s architecture has pushed building techniques in order to take his organics form to reality, and I think that the best way to understand his projects is not through renders or even drawings, but by watching the structure and the construction progress.

© Morphosis

After the break drawings and several photos during the construction phase of this almost completed project in China:

© Morphosis

© Morphosis

The Giant Campus project is a compact village that accommodates diverse functions in a flexible framework of forms that move in and out of a folded landscape plane. Situated amid existing canals and a new man made lake, the undulating office building interacts with an augmented ground plane, joining architecture to landscape and environment to site. The East Campus office building contains three zones: open, non-hierarchical office space; private offices, and executive suites, which cantilever dramatically over the lake. Additional program is integrated into the lifted landscape, including a library, an auditorium, an exhibition space, and a café on the east campus. On the West Campus, additional program space-submerged below an expansive, undulating green roof- includes a pool, a multi-purpose sports court, and additional relaxation and fitness spaces for employees. The landform culminates to the west at a company guest hotel where glass-floored private bedroom suites project over a wildlife pond.

© Morphosis

Several plazas, carved from the landscape, provide outdoor break and recreational spaces for employees. At the south edge of the campus, a pedestrian plaza steps down to the water’s edge in a continuous outdoor walkway that provides pedestrian access to the lake. The main circulation spine, an enclosed walkway located outboard of the office building, bridges over the street connecting the east and west campuses.

© Morphosis

A range of features on the project maximize both energy efficiency and occupant comfort. The West Campus’s landscaped green roof provides thermal mass that limits the heat gain and reduces cooling expenditures. The façade’s double skin and insulated glass curtain wall minimize solar heat gain and improve overall efficiency. The central circulation spine, along with the recreational amenities and plazas provide opportunities for chance encounters and places for employees to gather without the confines of cubicles or unnecessary divisions. The narrow profile of the office building combined with a system of skylights ensure that employees have continuous access to natural daylight.

© Morphosis

-

Project Manager:
Tim Christ
Paul Gonzales

Project Architect:
Hann-Shiuh Chen
Mario Cipresso
Ted Kane

Project Designer:
Leonore Daum

Project Team: Patrick Dunn-Baker
With:
Andrew Batay-Csorba
Marty Doscher
Graham Ferrier
Chris Herring
Debbie Lin
Kristina Loock
Yichen Lu
Scott Severson
Mohamed Sharif
Suzanne Tanascaux
Chris Warren

Project Assistant:
Adam Bressler
Soohyun Chang
Guiomar Contreras
Laura Foxman
Joe Justus
Michelle Siu Lee
Hugo Martinez
Mark McPhie
With:
Kyle Coburn
Brock Hinze
Sunnie Lau
Greg Neudorf
Christin To
Jose Vargas
Dana Viquez
Mike Patterson
Nutthawut Piriyaprakob
Aleksander Tamm-Seitz

Structural Engineer: Bao Ye, MAA Engineers, Thornton Tomasetti Group, Inc.
Design Institute: Moh and Associates Inc
Electrical Engineer: IBE Consulting Engineers, MAA Engineers
Mechanical Engineer: IBE Consulting Engineers, MAA Engineers
Interior Design: Morphosis
Landscape Designer: SWA Group
General Contractor: China Construction Third Engineering Bureau
Local Architect: SURV

© Morphosis

 
 
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In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis: © Morphosis
Morphosis Architects is currently completing a massive pr… http://bit.ly/6zBLeY

 
# January 14, 2010 at 16:48
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ArchDaily: In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis http://bit.ly/5ea9CK

 
# January 14, 2010 at 16:48
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Park says:

RT @archdaily: In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis http://bit.ly/6qF7Jo

 
# January 14, 2010 at 17:37
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In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis http://bit.ly/7MIuBd

 
# January 14, 2010 at 18:02
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Joshua says:

Could have used a more legible exploded diagram… for a building this complex, those are wonderful, but this one doesn’t seem to be clear, even with the different colors.

 
# January 14, 2010 at 17:52
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Rembo says:

OMG, the Morphosis factory exploded and the parts is everywhere!

 
# January 14, 2010 at 20:11
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"In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis | ArchDaily" http://tinyurl.com/ybjukod Black In America

 
# January 14, 2010 at 22:01
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sweet flower says:

Does anyone know what kind of software did they use for this project? I am just wondering if this is microstation or bentley architecture. I just want to know if these above software can do complex geometry or not.

 
# January 14, 2010 at 21:59
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    sean says:

    There’s a guy coming from Morphosis to our school to show us how to use Catia and Digital Project, which is what they and Gehry use.

     
    # January 14, 2010 at 22:56
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      jp says:

      what school do you go to?

       
      # January 14, 2010 at 23:04
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      sean verdecia says:

      University Of South Florida
      http://www.arch.usf.edu/

       
      # January 14, 2010 at 23:37
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    Adam says:

    one of my instructors was a project architect on this. he told me he uses microstation

     
    # January 16, 2010 at 00:53
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      jp says:

      do you know what else they use? as far as three-dimensional modeling goes?

       
      # January 16, 2010 at 19:12
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      sean says:

      You’re right, I was mis-informed. The person coming to our school is from FRONT, a firm that specializes in facades…

       
      # January 16, 2010 at 19:14
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joe says:

how in the earth you do working drawing for this?

 
# January 14, 2010 at 23:26
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CATIA is a beautiful beast…but it cannot replicate or imply good design. I particularly enjoy the (obviously altered) image documenting a site worker moving the building components via shoulder fulcrum. This is not ancient Egypt, Morphosis; adjust your perspectives accordingly.

 
# January 15, 2010 at 00:06
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    sean verdecia says:

    Which image is altered? The one with the guy carrying the rolls?
    About CATIA, I think you could say that any tool you use will not imply good design. Though, if we want to try new things or bring a level of thoughtful customization back into architecture without the use of slave labor, these new tools might give us that chance.

     
    # January 15, 2010 at 00:17
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    jp says:

    that’s how they work in china

    get over it.

     
    # January 15, 2010 at 01:09
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My point is exactly that: the use use of thoughtful customization without the use of slave labor. The perspectives should demonstrate this sentiment…No laborer would use aforementioned shoulder apparatus, so why include it in a perspective? Not only is it demeaning, its downright atrocious by most moral standards. Take a look at other perspectives documented on this site: are any other money shots showing workers subjected to abnormal working conditions? No…but let’s not digress…it’s just a pretty picture.

 
# January 15, 2010 at 00:26
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    sean says:

    I don’t know, when I was working on a construction site, we carried things however we could. I wouldn’t jump to conclusions, since those rolls may not weigh much and there is a wheelbarrow sitting off to the side unused, by choice. How else would you suggest movement? A crane for each roll? Also keep in mind this project is in China, and Morphosis is probably not operating as a contractor.

     
    # January 15, 2010 at 00:38
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    Mickey Mao says:

    I don’t believe that is an altered image. You say that no laborer would use the shoulder apparatus, but that is precisely one of the methods that construction workers in China use. It isn’t an abnormal working condition to build in this way and I don’t believe it is demeaning at all. (perhaps his living condition is demeaning, but not the method he is carrying the rolls)

    In fact it is good you have brought attention to this image because it highlights the real problem of building highly sophisticated and technical projects here in China while utilizing low-tech methods and inexperienced construction workers. From this point of view, the project is an impressive accomplishment and looks like it will be a success when finished.

     
    # January 15, 2010 at 05:00
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    i2h says:

    presume much? that’s how they carry things on chinese construction sites, so what is this “moral standard” you’re referring to? the one you’re applying of your own accord to that image? get over yourself.

     
    # January 15, 2010 at 09:43
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    NMiller says:

    Someone needs to get out of their own backyard… Yes, that is a real photo. Yes, that is how they do it there (here)

    And what moral standards are you referring to? I have worked construction in the US and have been put in ‘worse’ situations than is depicted in that photo.

     
    # January 16, 2010 at 12:50
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      Alexander Jack says:

      Here, here

       
      # January 16, 2010 at 15:22
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China is soooo big, it seems like that everything they do is in a grand scale!

 
# January 15, 2010 at 02:21
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RT @archdaily: In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis http://bit.ly/6qF7Jo

 
# January 15, 2010 at 05:15
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Jack says:

That is a photo of a worker carrying some stuff. I have spent time in China, that is how they do it, as in several other Asian countries. Dont be some presumptuous and pretentious…

 
# January 15, 2010 at 04:52
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Hang says:

It is quite strange that they said that they use some sort of technique to make sure energy-saving. I am just wondering it may save more energy to build small different parts in this large plot instead of using one such giant building. The amount of material which they are using should be a huge number.

 
# January 15, 2010 at 04:54
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Dariusz says:

dog- best photo ever!

 
# January 15, 2010 at 05:25
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    A says:

    agreed

     
    # January 15, 2010 at 13:41
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    Rob Aid says:

    doggy!

     
    # January 15, 2010 at 14:45
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Keep Going says:

RT @archdaily: In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis http://bit.ly/6qF7Jo

 
# January 15, 2010 at 07:49
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watashimo says:

I really like these in-progress shots. They make my current project look really boring tho’……

 
# January 15, 2010 at 10:23
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ethem says:

even the construction phase looks amazing, dude i just like anatomy of the buildings, all the exposed bones, stripped muscles, internal organs, veins, nerves etc…maybe i should drop architecture and become a surgeon! i usually hate the “i have a huge penis and i want to show it off” manner in architecture esp in the projects in china, dubai, etc…but this one pretty excites me! good job team morphosis!

 
# January 16, 2010 at 05:23
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asdaf says:

this is very challenging to get a hold of. i like the comment about the morphosis factory exploding. i think what this lacks is the rigor that is typically found in their work. this seems to be all over the place with no back beat holding it together. personally i dont rank this very high on my morphosis success scale.

 
# January 16, 2010 at 12:47
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    jp says:

    what do you mean “no back beat holding it together”

    Can’t you see the undulating ground plane that is so common in all of morphosis’ work, especially here? It marries the architecture to the landscape.

    you seem like the type that critiques for the sake of saying something… you don’t really say anything of real value, it’s basically just air, or in this case text.

     
    # January 16, 2010 at 19:08
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    sean says:

    If you ever get to talk to Thom Mayne, he will tell you that in college, he was known as “the piece stealer”, because he would cobble together discarded models to create something new and unnexpected. I like. Sure beats the boring typical stuff that architects are doing everywhere, like cantilevered boxes and louvre covered facades….

     
    # January 16, 2010 at 19:20
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Snuffaluffagus says:

Whenever I see Mr. Mayne’s buildings in person I’m always dissapointed, left in a state of strange uneasiness as they seem to be missing that human touch. This one looks more suited to the film “Avatar” or the dystopia of “Blade Runner.” His buildings almost always appear to be at odds with our society’s urban fabric, never complementing or enhancing.

 
# January 16, 2010 at 21:54
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    asdaf says:

    nice.

     
    # January 16, 2010 at 22:13
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    trey says:

    relating a building to a film isnt a very convincing argument simply denying an architect because he/she do not blend in or mesh into the context makes it bad ?

     
    # January 28, 2010 at 20:20
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asdaf says:

oh JP….oh JP

do you understand rigor?

 
# January 16, 2010 at 22:09
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    jp says:

    apparently you don’t.

     
    # January 17, 2010 at 00:03
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Snuffaluffagus says:

decon is dead to me

 
# January 17, 2010 at 00:11
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hann says:

well, I’am still working on site for this project now….just want to let you guys know, our site dog has perished, gone, disappeared forever…very sad that we have been with her for more then a year……told by workers on site….

 
# January 17, 2010 at 14:04
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    bedsal says:

    what?! how could it be.

     
    # February 4, 2011 at 07:26
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7:08 AM Sep 22nd

Reading: "In Progress: Giant Group Campus / Morphosis | ArchDaily"( http://twitthis.com/cvw45r )

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5:51 PM May 4th

@全球建筑资讯 巨人集团在上海松江的新总部,难得的建筑视觉盛宴,有机会一定要去看看! http://t.cn/h5Y8mw http://t.cn/hqFnnL http://goo.gl/fb/wRcDC

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3:30 PM May 6th

Thom Mayne does it again. I love construction photos.
http://www.archdaily.com/46598/in-progress-giant-group-campus-morphosis/

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