Literature Study: Shanghai International Cruise Terminal, China
Literature Study: Shanghai International Cruise Terminal, China
Literature Study: Shanghai International Cruise Terminal, China
1. OFFICE PAVILIONS
2. PUBLIC WATER
GARDEN
3. PUBLIC GALLERY
4. PUBLIC
PERFORMANCE
5. MEDIA GARDEN
6. FOOD COURT
7. PUBLIC PARK
8. PHASE 2 TOWERS
F
L
O
O
R
FIRST FLOOR
P
L
A
N
S
SECOND FLOOR
F
L
O
O
R
THIRD FLOOR
P
L
A
N
FOURTH FLOOR S
SPARCH’s challenge was how to deal with the ‘under world’ as well as the architecture rising out of it. Their solution
was to create ambiguity as to where the ground plane is, by opening up a honeycomb of sunken courtyards. The six
cruise shiphead quarter buildings appear to disappear into these sculpted holes, providing abundant opportunities to
explore connections between the ground and ‘lower ground’ levels. The concept also explored the idea of ripples in
the landscape being amplified into standing crystal waves that wrap over the buildings. This augmented over time
into a second skin that protects the commercial office spaces from their due south orientation, and is populated with
semi outdoor balcony spaces overlooking the Huangpu River.
Three inhabitable amorphous blobs -suspended with cable within a 40m-tall, glass-clad portal that creates a dramatic city
stage addressing the public park and the waterfront, where thousands of people can gather to participate in festivals.
C
O
N
C
L
U
S
I
O
N
All six buildings which constitute this architectural development offer a diverse mixture of business and leisure facilities for
the end-users at the Shanghai International Cruise Terminal, aiming at establishing Shanghai’s status as an essential
commerce and tourism center. The interiors of these six buildings more or less follow the concept of the exterior landscaping
and architecture. They consist of elements which seem as sculpted holes which appear and disappear, just like the exterior
landscaping where by law 50 percent of the terminal is required to be above ground level and the other 50 below. Vibrant
colors, voids and various textures, materials, patterns and lines constitute part of the interiors. Egg-like sculpted forms create
part of the voids in the buildings which have glass ceilings thus allowing abundant of natural light into the buildings; another
element of sustainable design rather than using artificial lighting.