1. ArchDaily
  2. Shanghai

Shanghai: The Latest Architecture and News

How OMA's First Project in Shanghai Acts As a Connecting Element for the City

#donotsettle is an online video project created by Wahyu Pratomo and Kris Provoost about architecture and the way it is perceived by its users. Having published a number of videos on ArchDaily over the past two years, Pratomo and Provoost are now launching an exclusive column, “#donotsettle extra,” which will accompany some of their #donotsettle videos with in-depth textual analysis of the buildings they visit.

After a stop in Doha to visit IM Pei’s Museum of Islamic Art, and a peek inside MVRDV’s house office in Rotterdam, we are bringing you to Shanghai for our 3rd #donotsettle Extra column. Last week we visited OMA’s first project in Shanghai, the Lujiazui Exhibition Centre, and had the privilege to get a sneak preview before it opens to the public in the next months. Please tag along!

How OMA's First Project in Shanghai Acts As a Connecting Element for the City - Image 1 of 4How OMA's First Project in Shanghai Acts As a Connecting Element for the City - Image 2 of 4How OMA's First Project in Shanghai Acts As a Connecting Element for the City - Image 3 of 4How OMA's First Project in Shanghai Acts As a Connecting Element for the City - Image 4 of 4How OMA's First Project in Shanghai Acts As a Connecting Element for the City - More Images+ 12

Longnan Garden Social Housing Estate / Atelier GOM

Longnan Garden Social Housing Estate / Atelier GOM  - Social Housing, Courtyard, Door, Stairs, Facade, Handrail, Fence, Balcony, LightingLongnan Garden Social Housing Estate / Atelier GOM  - Social Housing, Facade, CityscapeLongnan Garden Social Housing Estate / Atelier GOM  - Social Housing, FacadeLongnan Garden Social Housing Estate / Atelier GOM  - Social Housing, FacadeLongnan Garden Social Housing Estate / Atelier GOM  - More Images+ 43

Shanghai, China
  • Architects: Atelier GOM
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  48112
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017

Lane 189 / UNStudio

Lane 189 / UNStudio - Shopping Centers, Facade, ArchLane 189 / UNStudio - Shopping Centers, Facade, Bench, CityscapeLane 189 / UNStudio - Shopping Centers, Facade, StairsLane 189 / UNStudio - Shopping Centers, Facade, BenchLane 189 / UNStudio - More Images+ 17

  • Architects: UNStudio
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  38800
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  Beghelli, JYMQ, Jojo, Opple, Osram, +2
  • Professionals: Inhabit, AG Licht, LEOX, TJAD

Shanghai Baoye Center / LYCS Architecture

Shanghai Baoye Center / LYCS Architecture - Institutional BuildingsShanghai Baoye Center / LYCS Architecture - Institutional BuildingsShanghai Baoye Center / LYCS Architecture - Institutional BuildingsShanghai Baoye Center / LYCS Architecture - Institutional BuildingsShanghai Baoye Center / LYCS Architecture - More Images+ 9

  • Architects: LYCS Architecture
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  27394
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017

Heatherwick Studio and Foster+Partners' Bund Finance Centre in Shanghai Photographed by Laurian Ghinitoiu

Located in central Shanghai, this multifunctional arts and culture complex is part of the Bund Finance Centre – a joint project between London-based practices Heatherwick Studio and Foster+Partners. Sitting between the old town and the new financial district, this new space combines exhibition and events spaces with a performance venue inspired, according to the architects, "by the open stages of traditional Chinese theatres." Of most visual interest is the building's mechanical "moving veil," captured here by photographer Laurian Ghinitoiu.

Heatherwick Studio and Foster+Partners' Bund Finance Centre in Shanghai Photographed by Laurian Ghinitoiu - Image 1 of 4Heatherwick Studio and Foster+Partners' Bund Finance Centre in Shanghai Photographed by Laurian Ghinitoiu - Image 2 of 4Heatherwick Studio and Foster+Partners' Bund Finance Centre in Shanghai Photographed by Laurian Ghinitoiu - Image 3 of 4Heatherwick Studio and Foster+Partners' Bund Finance Centre in Shanghai Photographed by Laurian Ghinitoiu - Image 4 of 4Heatherwick Studio and Foster+Partners' Bund Finance Centre in Shanghai Photographed by Laurian Ghinitoiu - More Images+ 32

Underground Forest in Onepark Gubei / Wutopia Lab

Shanghai, China

Underground Forest in Onepark Gubei / Wutopia Lab - Library, Stairs, Handrail, DoorUnderground Forest in Onepark Gubei / Wutopia Lab - Library, Beam, Arch, Chair, TableUnderground Forest in Onepark Gubei / Wutopia Lab - Library, Table, Lighting, ChairUnderground Forest in Onepark Gubei / Wutopia Lab - Library, Stairs, Beam, Handrail, ChairUnderground Forest in Onepark Gubei / Wutopia Lab - More Images+ 21

WoW Lab / Wutopia Lab

WoW Lab / Wutopia Lab - Buildings, Door, Facade, Stairs, ArchWoW Lab / Wutopia Lab - Buildings, Beam, Lighting, ChairWoW Lab / Wutopia Lab - Buildings, Facade, Beam, Arch, CityscapeWoW Lab / Wutopia Lab - BuildingsWoW Lab / Wutopia Lab - More Images+ 31

Shanghai, China
  • Architects: Wutopia Lab
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  180
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017

#donotsettle Gives a Critical Tour of Perkins+Will’s Shanghai Natural History Museum

In #donotsettle’s latest escapade, architect Kris Provoost scrutinizes Perkins+Will’s Shanghai Natural History Museum. The boyishly charming and ever-inquisitive vlogger presents a unique POV tour of the unusual building situated in the middle of the Jing'an Sculpture Park.

Over a soundtrack of slick house music, Provoost offers up tidbits that cannot be gleaned from a photo. As he approaches the structure, he points out topographical aspects, the relationship of the structure to its context, and various construction details. The rapid-fire architectural observations are often punctuated by brief cross-sectional sketches that augment the experiential commentary.

#donotsettle Gives a Critical Tour of Perkins+Will’s Shanghai Natural History Museum - Featured Image#donotsettle Gives a Critical Tour of Perkins+Will’s Shanghai Natural History Museum - Image 1 of 4#donotsettle Gives a Critical Tour of Perkins+Will’s Shanghai Natural History Museum - Image 2 of 4#donotsettle Gives a Critical Tour of Perkins+Will’s Shanghai Natural History Museum - Image 3 of 4#donotsettle Gives a Critical Tour of Perkins+Will’s Shanghai Natural History Museum - More Images

Which Cities Have the Most Skyscrapers?

There’s a lot that the presence of skyscrapers can say about a city. They can be indicators of anything from wealth to modernization to density, or a combination of all three, depending on where you look. This potential to observe trends in a city through the height of its buildings makes data on those buildings valuable to a multitude of industries, so companies like Emporis conduct and distribute research on topics like the newest, tallest, and most expensive buildings in the world. Keep reading to find out about the ten tall cities that are home to the largest number of skyscrapers—as defined by Emporis' definition of a building that is 100 meters or more.

This Photoseries Captures the State of China’s Renowned Architectural Icons

A simultaneous celebration of their cultural iconicity and distillation from their various contexts, Beautified China is a photographic essay by Kris Provoost (one-half of the vlogging duo behind #donotsettle) that tracks the evolution of Chinese architectural landmarks over the course of the past 7 years. Beginning his investigation with the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai, Provoost considers a decade of architecture proposed for China by the profession’s biggest names, many of which have been built now with monumental reputations in rising cities.

“Most ‘starchitects’ had their chance to build, or to fulfill their wildest dreams,” explains Provoost. “Some of them became landmarks: CCTV headquarters by Rem Koolhaas and Ole Scheeren or the Bird’s Nest/National Stadium by Herzog and de Meuron for example. Others have turned a suburb into a new center, or have established a new city on its own.”

This Photoseries Captures the State of China’s Renowned Architectural Icons - Image 1 of 4This Photoseries Captures the State of China’s Renowned Architectural Icons - Image 2 of 4This Photoseries Captures the State of China’s Renowned Architectural Icons - Image 3 of 4This Photoseries Captures the State of China’s Renowned Architectural Icons - Image 4 of 4This Photoseries Captures the State of China’s Renowned Architectural Icons - More Images+ 17

Shanghai Landmark Center / Aedas

Shanghai Landmark Center  / Aedas - Retail , FacadeShanghai Landmark Center  / Aedas - Retail , Facade, Door, LightingShanghai Landmark Center  / Aedas - Retail , Beam, LightingShanghai Landmark Center  / Aedas - Retail , Facade, CityscapeShanghai Landmark Center  / Aedas - More Images+ 14

Shanghai, China
  • Architects: Aedas
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  CSG, CSG Holding, Duranar

Could Electric Cars Turn Gas Stations Into the Community Hubs of the Future?

One general trend in today's Information Age involves the absolute transmutation of downtime into productivity or engagement of any kind, however meaningless. We hear it all the time: we have lost our ability to be still. However, as a team at Ennead Lab has observed, some of the same technologies that are causing this shift in routine also have the potential to open new, empty pockets of time in our daily lives, and affect the built spaces with which we interact.

Tasked with designing an electric car charging station for a development in Shanghai, Ennead realized that the five hours required to fill up a single standard charge necessitate a place for customers to wait. In an article on Metropolis Magazine, they show that the promise of transportation-less people to stick around in one place for such a period of time opens up a host of possibilities for what could fill the latency period; the Shanghai project, however, focuses on the opportunity to create a civic space. The team has imagined the modern "gas station" as a vertical charging tower that calls upon the functionality of urban parking elevators in the 20th century, this time clad in reflective silver to serve as a beacon for customers in search of a charge. Rather than standalone charge-park towers, the projects are integrated into a system that encourages patrons to walk to neighboring zones to eat, shop, and socialize while they wait.

OMA to Regenerate Historic Columbia Circle in Shanghai

OMA, in collaboration with local architects ECADI and landscape architects West 8, has developed a new mixed-use masterplan for Columbia Circle in the center of Shanghai. Layered with rich history, the site contains preserved colonial monuments, former industrial buildings and 1920’s country club buildings by architect Elliott Hazzard – these elements will be renewed and transformed by the master plan to return Columbia Circle into one of Shanghai’s most prominent public spaces.

OMA to Regenerate Historic Columbia Circle in Shanghai - Facade, Chair, CityscapeOMA to Regenerate Historic Columbia Circle in Shanghai - FacadeOMA to Regenerate Historic Columbia Circle in Shanghai - CityscapeOMA to Regenerate Historic Columbia Circle in Shanghai - Image 4 of 4OMA to Regenerate Historic Columbia Circle in Shanghai - More Images+ 7

Sasaki Unveils Design for Sunqiao, a 100-Hectare Urban Farming District in Shanghai

With nearly 24 million inhabitants to feed and a decline in the availability and quality of agricultural land, the Chinese megacity of Shanghai is set to realize the Sunqiao Urban Agricultural District, a 100-hectare masterplan designed by US-based firm Sasaki Associates. Situated between Shanghai’s main international airport and the city center, Sunqiao will introduce large-scale vertical farming to the city of soaring skyscrapers. While primarily responding to the growing agricultural demand in the region, Sasaki’s vision goes further, using urban farming as a dynamic living laboratory for innovation, interaction, and education.

Sasaki Unveils Design for Sunqiao, a 100-Hectare Urban Farming District in Shanghai - SustainabilitySasaki Unveils Design for Sunqiao, a 100-Hectare Urban Farming District in Shanghai - SustainabilitySasaki Unveils Design for Sunqiao, a 100-Hectare Urban Farming District in Shanghai - SustainabilitySasaki Unveils Design for Sunqiao, a 100-Hectare Urban Farming District in Shanghai - SustainabilitySasaki Unveils Design for Sunqiao, a 100-Hectare Urban Farming District in Shanghai - More Images+ 12

Eight Tenths Garden / Wutopia Lab

Eight Tenths Garden / Wutopia Lab - Museums & Exhibit , Facade, Handrail, Balcony, DoorEight Tenths Garden / Wutopia Lab - Museums & Exhibit , Garden, FacadeEight Tenths Garden / Wutopia Lab - Museums & Exhibit , Garden, Facade, Column, Beam, Lighting, ChairEight Tenths Garden / Wutopia Lab - Museums & Exhibit , FacadeEight Tenths Garden / Wutopia Lab - More Images+ 20

Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District

With their design approach treating the site as a work of art, GroupGSA’s proposal for a new hotel in Shanghai’s Fengxian District has been awarded 2nd prize in a recent competition. Located in the predominantly undeveloped Nangiao New City and part of the Yangtze River delta in south Shanghai, the Wanda Jinhai Lake Hotel aims to garner new interest in the region through the creation of a new social, cultural, and economic landmark.

At the center of the Jinhai Lake, the new hotel integrates into the site and provides scenic vistas of the surrounding waterscape. “Inspiration stemmed from the concept of Chinese Calligraphy, the stroke of a brush with its ink dripping in the water,” say the architects. “Our site is merely a piece of art and we plan to leave our mark via our architecture which is painted on the site following the lines and the movement of the surrounding context.”

Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 1 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 2 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 3 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - Image 4 of 4Calligraphy-Inspired Lakeside Hotel Proposed as the Centerpiece of Shanghai's Fengxian District - More Images+ 17

NIKE + RUN CLUB Hubs Land in Shanghai / Coordination Asia

NIKE + RUN CLUB Hubs Land in Shanghai / Coordination Asia - Small Scale, FacadeNIKE + RUN CLUB Hubs Land in Shanghai / Coordination Asia - Small ScaleNIKE + RUN CLUB Hubs Land in Shanghai / Coordination Asia - Small Scale, FacadeNIKE + RUN CLUB Hubs Land in Shanghai / Coordination Asia - Small Scale, FacadeNIKE + RUN CLUB Hubs Land in Shanghai / Coordination Asia - More Images+ 10

Steven Holl Architects Unveils Plans for Cloud-Like Cultural and Health Center in Shanghai

Steven Holl Architects has revealed plans for a new Cultural and Health Center to be located in Shanghai’s Fengxian District. Set into the public landscape, the two buildings will serve as a “social condenser” aimed at integrating the community of surrounding housing blocks together into a park along the Punan Canal.

Steven Holl Architects Unveils Plans for Cloud-Like Cultural and Health Center in Shanghai - Garden, FacadeSteven Holl Architects Unveils Plans for Cloud-Like Cultural and Health Center in Shanghai - FacadeSteven Holl Architects Unveils Plans for Cloud-Like Cultural and Health Center in Shanghai - Stairs, Handrail, FacadeSteven Holl Architects Unveils Plans for Cloud-Like Cultural and Health Center in Shanghai - Image 9 of 4Steven Holl Architects Unveils Plans for Cloud-Like Cultural and Health Center in Shanghai - More Images+ 25