1,000 Trees, Shanghai
Architect: Heatherwick Studio
Year: 2020
Location: Shanghai, China
Category: Headquarters / office / Commercial / Office
Status: Built
About
Following the success of the UK Pavilion for the 2010 Shanghai World Expo, the studio came into contact with clients in Asia and was invited to design a large mixed-use development – including residential, hotels, retail, and commercial units – on a six-hectare site in Shanghai. The rapid urban growth in China has led to the construction of increasingly enormous property developments. To counteract this trend, the team faced the challenge of designing a 400-meter long building without losing its connection with the environment and keeping a human scale. The site was surrounded on three sides by concrete residential towers and on the other by the M50 art district and a public park next to the Suzhou Creek, an area that has suffered a gentrification process in which its industrial warehouses have been transformed into art galleries and workshops. The design is set out as an extension of these two elements, integrating art and vegetation. 1000 Trees is conceived not only as a building but as a piece of topography and takes the form of two tree-covered mountains. The total buildable area is fragmented along a three-dimensional grid that rises gradually from the river and is cut abruptly to create a recognizable facade towards the art district. Instead of hiding the columns that make this geometry possible, they are given prominence and are expressed as ‘trees’ supporting planters throughout on the outside of the buildings. This solution, aside from creating a defining aesthetic element, is structurally efficient because the planters transmit loads directly to the foundations. The facade materials also help reduce the scale and create a domestic image. The hand-crafted finish of the columns, with convex curves merged with concave ones, creates a changing and apparently randomized surface, enriching the tactile qualities of the building.