• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Tagged: lycs architecture

LYCS Architecture to Design CEIG Research Center in Shenzhen

By Bustler Editors|

Tuesday, Dec 20, 2011

Visualization of the new CEIG Research Center in Shenzhen, China by LYCS Architecture (Image: LYCS Architecture)

Chinese practice LYCS Architecture has won an invited competition for a 32,000 sqm testing and assessment research center in the city of Shenzhen, China. The brief called for a mixed-use building including offices, residential and commercial.

Project Description from the Architects:

The project conceptually begins with the traditional Chinese urban design idea of a “miniature city” and divides the site into 10 equal volumes. Then the volumes are aligned corresponding to the scattered programs across the landscape.

The project maintains horizontal consistency while allowing for the necessary building components to address diverse and at times conflicting desires for the overall design concept.

Street view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

As the building volumes shift in plan according to programmatic adjacencies, the glass curtain walls remain continuous and the floor plates are consistently continuous. Meanwhile, the third floor is being dramatically transformed into a tessellated plate that twists horizontally to tension the homogenous facade and break the overall continuity of the design. Additionally, the external stairs break down the facade's impassibly clean horizontal lines, allowing the design of the facade to function both in the big picture horizontally, and in precise detail diagonally.

Aerial view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

The building volume is radically interrupted by a series of tessellated hyperbolic parabola surfaces on the third floor. This floor fundamentally challenges the standard office building with a synthetic gathering of three alternate architectural inventions: interruption of the perfect horizontal grid, connection of many floors with varying heights, and formation of a wave-like landscape terrace. Each terrace is smoothly connected by ramps and steps, providing people with multiple choices of circulation and rich spatial experiences. The terrace roof also extends into the interior space of the third floor, creating spaces for public exhibition, education, service and commercial.

Court yard view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

The building volumes are connected on the second floor by different outdoor and indoor corridors, forming courtyards in the interstices of the unity. The courtyards, together with roof gardens and third floor landscape terraces, create a vertical green system.

Interior view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

Project Details:

Architects: LYCS Architecture
Location: Shenzhen, China
Project Team: Hao Ruan, Yuan Zhan, Xu Li, Meng Yang, Yan Li, Peng Wang, Vedrana Puhalo, Zhengmeng Dong
Consultant: Shenzhen Institute of Building Research
Project Period: 2011-2013
Size: 32,000 sqm

Related

shenzhen ● residential ● research ● office ● lycs architecture ● labratory ● commercial ● china ● asia

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

LYCS Architecture to Design CEIG Research Center in Shenzhen

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Next page » Loading

LYCS Architecture to Design CEIG Research Center in Shenzhen

By Bustler Editors|

Tuesday, Dec 20, 2011

Share

Visualization of the new CEIG Research Center in Shenzhen, China by LYCS Architecture (Image: LYCS Architecture)

Related

shenzhen ● residential ● research ● office ● lycs architecture ● labratory ● commercial ● china ● asia

Chinese practice LYCS Architecture has won an invited competition for a 32,000 sqm testing and assessment research center in the city of Shenzhen, China. The brief called for a mixed-use building including offices, residential and commercial.

Project Description from the Architects:

The project conceptually begins with the traditional Chinese urban design idea of a “miniature city” and divides the site into 10 equal volumes. Then the volumes are aligned corresponding to the scattered programs across the landscape.

The project maintains horizontal consistency while allowing for the necessary building components to address diverse and at times conflicting desires for the overall design concept.

Street view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

As the building volumes shift in plan according to programmatic adjacencies, the glass curtain walls remain continuous and the floor plates are consistently continuous. Meanwhile, the third floor is being dramatically transformed into a tessellated plate that twists horizontally to tension the homogenous facade and break the overall continuity of the design. Additionally, the external stairs break down the facade's impassibly clean horizontal lines, allowing the design of the facade to function both in the big picture horizontally, and in precise detail diagonally.

Aerial view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

The building volume is radically interrupted by a series of tessellated hyperbolic parabola surfaces on the third floor. This floor fundamentally challenges the standard office building with a synthetic gathering of three alternate architectural inventions: interruption of the perfect horizontal grid, connection of many floors with varying heights, and formation of a wave-like landscape terrace. Each terrace is smoothly connected by ramps and steps, providing people with multiple choices of circulation and rich spatial experiences. The terrace roof also extends into the interior space of the third floor, creating spaces for public exhibition, education, service and commercial.

Court yard view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

The building volumes are connected on the second floor by different outdoor and indoor corridors, forming courtyards in the interstices of the unity. The courtyards, together with roof gardens and third floor landscape terraces, create a vertical green system.

Interior view (Image: LYCS Architecture)

Project Details:

Architects: LYCS Architecture
Location: Shenzhen, China
Project Team: Hao Ruan, Yuan Zhan, Xu Li, Meng Yang, Yan Li, Peng Wang, Vedrana Puhalo, Zhengmeng Dong
Consultant: Shenzhen Institute of Building Research
Project Period: 2011-2013
Size: 32,000 sqm

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Designer

HATCH ARCHITECTURE

Designer

Los Angeles, CA, US

Studio Operations Manager

Obata Noblin Office

Studio Operations Manager

San Francisco, CA, US

Landscape Designer / Landscape Architect

Stoss Landscape Urbanism

Landscape Designer / Landscape Architect

Los Angeles, CA, US

Residential Project Manager/Designer

Neal Beckstedt Studio

Residential Project Manager/Designer

Brooklyn, NY, US

Entry Level Architectural Designer

Gerner Kronick + Valcarcel Architects DPC

Entry Level Architectural Designer

New York, NY, US

Project Manager - AD 100 Firm | Classical, High-End Residential

Project Manager - AD 100 Firm | Classical, High-End Residential

New York, NY, US

Project Architect (5–10 Years Experience)

Stuart Basseches Architect

Project Architect (5–10 Years Experience)

Sag Harbor, NY, US

Senior Project Manager, Interior Architecture & Design

Meshberg Group

Senior Project Manager, Interior Architecture & Design

Miami Beach, FL, US

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

Pleasanton, CA, US

Project Architect

Studio AR&D Architects

Project Architect

Los Angeles, CA, US

Next page » Loading