Jiushi Corporation Headquarters
Shanghai, China, 1995-2001
The first major new building in Shanghai to be designed by a Western architect, this forty-storey headquarters tower for Jiushi established a benchmark for subsequent building in the city, setting new environmental standards. Shops, restaurants and bars are integrated in a lower block at the base of the tower, evoking the spirit of traditional Shanghai arcades.
Co-architects:
East China Architectural Design and Research Institute
Shanghai has undergone a dramatic transformation over the last ten years, with large areas of the city that previously contained only traditional low-rise buildings now featuring dense thickets of office towers. Heralding one such area of development, this 40-storey tower is the headquarters of the Jiushi Corporation, a Chinese company that is providing the inward investment for the next wave of building in the South Bund area of the city. The competition-winning scheme is the practices first on the Chinese mainland.
Occupying one of the most significant sites in Shanghai, the tower looks over the Huangpu River to the historical Bund and Pudong - the new business district. These views govern the structure of the building, with its concrete core positioned away from the river to create flexible curved floor-plates on the riverside, free of internal columns. Further animating the expansiveness of these views both inside the building and out, a triple-skin ventilated glazing system allows the tower to enjoy maximum daylight penetration without any attendant build-up of solar gain in the internal spaces. It is the first building in the city to employ such a system.
Breaking up the uniformity of the buildings facade, the floor-plates step back at three points over the height of the tower to form terraces, ideally suited to conferences. Above the highest of these terraces, at the top of the tower, a six-storey glazed winter garden is accommodated - unique in a city where most towers are capped by services installations. In contrast to the novelty of these pinnacle spaces, down below, at street level, the scheme responds more directly to its historical and geographic context - a six-storey block, adjacent to the tower, contains shops, restaurants and bars in line with the street, and references Shanghais immediate urban past with a double-height colonnade, reminiscent of the citys traditional shopping arcades.
Client:
Jiushi Corporation
Consultants:
Obayashi, Claude Engle