Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab

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Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab

Information

  • Project Name: Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom
  • Practice: Wutopia Lab
  • Completion year: 2022
  • Gross Built up Area: 1800 Sq.mt.
  • Project Location: Guangdong
  • Country: China
  • Lead Architects/Designer: YU Ting
  • Design Team: Project Architect: ZHANG Shuojiong, GUO Peijian, SHI Jieyu, NI Chenhao, ZHANG Wei, ZHAO Weiguo, LIU Jin (Water supply & drainage), LI Na (HVAC), LIANG Wenfeng (Electrical), WANG Zhongli, LI Jinlong, WANG Shuai, LI Wei, YUAN Junlong, XUE chao, GAO Dongwei, TAN Jiabin, ZHANG Hongru, WANG Rui, ZHANG Gongbo, HE Qing, WANG Shouheng, ZHOU Fengfu, LIANG Qian, ZHENG Yawen, HUA Ke, CHEN Yiwen, CHENG Rangrang
  • Clients: Zhongshan Shen Ye Wan Sheng Investment Co., Ltd., MA Pingcheng, YAO Zhu, LIN Haitao
  • Project Manager: DAI Xinyang
  • Interior + Furniture: G.ART
  • Photo Credits: CreatAR Images
  • Others: Architecture Construction Drawing Design: CAPOL, Facade Design Development: Dadi Façade, Lighting Consultant: ZHANG Chenlu, WEI Shiyu, LIU Xueyi
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Excerpt: Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom designed by Wutopia Lab,  giant structure covered with orange-red perforated aluminum panels and column-free open free space accommodating the exhibition spaces for real estate business. the building also represents traditional Chinese architecture’s tangible and intangible aspects.

Project Description

Hovering Kan-Too

“Mountains are only contingencies of geology. They do not kill deliberately, nor do they deliberately please: any emotional properties which they possess are vested in them by human imaginations.”

— Mountains of the Mind by Robert Macfarlane

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

[Text as submitted by architect] The translucent Great Bay Area Showroom known as the “Hovering Kan-Too” designed by Wutopia Lab, the door to future of Vanke-Shum Yip, was completed and opened in July 2022. Located at the west bank of the Pearl River Delta, and the west gate of the Shenzhen-Zhongshan Bridge, it is in the front-line coastal area of the Great Bay Area. Standing on the roof on sunny days, one can have a view of the spectacular building cluster on the other side of the sea in Qianhai, Shenzhen. The ambitious showroom is a new landmark of the new city floating on the sea.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

Persistence of the real estate developer

The showroom assuming the role of building selling represents the only persistence on architecture held by real estate developers having pursuits in an increasingly competitive market. The past few decades have witnessed a booming and highly competitive real estate market, which made Chinese people’s residences increasingly homogeneous from plan to façade. However, the showroom, which represents the image of the company and can also enhance the customer experience, is gaining more and more attention. As for the function, the showroom assumes the only role of selling buildings at the beginning, but nowadays, it has multiple functions, that is, to showcase the lifestyle while selling buildings in the early stage, and to transform into a community center or commercial center available for residents later.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images
Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

For quite a long time, showrooms serving as sales exhibition centers were gradually similar in design. With social media booming and becoming an important visual communication tool, real estate developers realized that showrooms can be an important visual medium to drive the impact and sales of their properties. This requires an innovative and unique design for the showroom.

Several principles of creating BDO

Principle 01: The form should be clear and simple. The form of showroom is based on a diamond-shaped site. The geometric column is generated and then becomes a simple, pure and distinct image after a few simple cuts that simulate the changing contour lines of a mountain range.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
Exploding isometric © Wutopia Lab

Principle 02: Large in volume. A two-and-a-half-story building is designed to be 21 meters high, which is the upper limit of low-rising buildings.

Principle 03: Large in span. The showroom is giant in structure. A column-free open free space of 16m*30m is supported by the main structure with two sets of core walls integrating evacuation stairs, elevators, tube shafts, toilets and other auxiliary functional spaces. The released public areas of the building continue and extend outdoor views while also flexibly adapting to the exhibition space where the use is unclear.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
Master Plan © Wutopia Lab
Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

My Mind on Locality

I had some non-formalistic thoughts about traditional Chinese architecture in the process of writing a special history of ancient Chinese architecture. I have consciously applied these reflections to construct new forms in my architectural creations, which I call “dodges”.

Dodges 01: Translucent 

Dodges 02: Stripping the climatic boundary from the visual boundary. 

The reason for choosing PTFE over ETFE this time is that PTFE provides the porosity required to meet the fire-fighting ventilation requirements, which allows architects to create an ambiguous climate cavity between the real building boundary and the membrane. Neither a part of the outdoor nor indoor environment, this cavity is a “gray space” filled with soft light, lush greenery and breeze, a contemporary expression of the local climate of the Lingnan area, located south of the Tropic of Cancer.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

Dodges 03: Houses within the house

So I made the space behind the PTFE on the second floor into a village. The meeting rooms, reception rooms and exhibition halls are designed as freestanding houses with pitched roofs, arranged around the atrium in an uneven and natural way (Note: The exhibition design does follow the architectural design guidelines, and half of the space on the second floor is temporarily changed during the exhibition construction, which is beyond the design intention). Each cabin has its own climatic boundary and is wrapped in a semi-outdoor green garden, making it a “retreat away from the world”.

Dodges 04: Floating

So in this BDO, I chose a kind of floating to fly, rather than the floating in science fiction movies. First, through the structural-based overhang and the sense of openness of the public space on the first floor, minimized contact with the ground of the first floor was achieved. The completed building above the second floor is then wrapped with PTFE. The PTFE film, approximately 3 meters in width, continues from the top to the bottom without horizontal seams or horizontal mullions, and hidden frames are adopted for vertical mullions, thus achieving maximum integrity of the white massing.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
2F isometric © Wutopia Lab
Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

Dodges 05: The “Ao Shan.” 

The translucent PTFE film reminds me of the ancient lamp mountain called “Ao Shan” made of fabric and paper. Daylight is used to create shadows on the inside of the translucent during the day, and light is used to create shadows on the outside of the translucent at night. These techniques make BDO float and give it a sense of expression.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

Journey into Amazing Caves

The first floor of the building needs to meet the needs of publicness and transparency, and it can be seen as a mountain hollowed out continuously, so that a continuous arch is formed in the interior. The orange-red curved perforated aluminum panels continue from the façade through the interior to the core boundary. This allows space on the first floor to gain full outward orientation, forming a whole with the exterior, but separated by a thin climatic boundary of a fully glazed curtain wall.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
First Floor Plan © Wutopia Lab
Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

The orange-red perforated aluminum panels have different aperture sizes and the aperture ratio is capable of meeting the MEP requirements of air conditioning and smoke extraction, thereby creating a clean and continuous wall-ceiling. In the center of the first floor, the same orange aluminum panels wrap around a central ceremonial space that houses a nearly 15-meter-long giant sandbox city model, which is the most important object in the showroom. Light pours from the roof of the second floor through the atrium wrapped in mirrored stainless steel, illuminating the sandbox of the Greater Bay Area. What we see is light without a lamp, like holy light shining towards the altar, giving a sense of the sacred to the business narrative.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
Section © Wutopia Lab

The orange cave-like space continues into the elevator lobby and staircase, but when one reaches the second floor, it suddenly becomes extensive as if one has arrived in a white village. This is the meeting, lounge and exhibition area of the exhibition center. Now, the focus turns from the space to the content.

At the top of the mountain

We made the roof with orange aluminum lamellas that follows the designed mountain ups and downs, covering the outdoor air conditioning units and smoke extraction rooms on the roof. For an architect, what he has achieved now can be considered complete and successful. But it is not enough for me. I insist on having an amphitheater. This is actually an individual theater, which I hope to use to capture a fleeting moment with patience. I envision myself standing at the top of the red mountain, myself mapped red. I can see the green hills and the blue sea, as well as my own desire. I could almost see a forest of concrete steel and glass growing rapidly around me.

Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images
Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
Second Floor Plan © Wutopia Lab
Hovering Kan-Too – Great Bay Area Center Showroom | Wutopia Lab
© CreatAR Images

Most common people consumed in generic daily life can not be reconciled. Only courage and imagination have the ability to resist time for a short time. As I stood barefoot and breathless on the top of the anti-Generic City’s Kan-Too, which is a mix of the real and the unreal, what comes into my mind is the moment of seeing the sun rising in the distance at the top of Mountain Tai after struggling to climb to the top and fighting against the cold overnight during my young days. Fear, cowardice and even humility and degradation will eventually transform into magnificence and nobility. That will be the moment when “I will reach my nature”.

“Those who travel to mountain-tops are half in love with themselves, and half in love with oblivion.”

—  Mountains of the Mind by Robert Macfarlan

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