Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Architects Find Intriguing CRE Projects in China

With the US Markets still in recovery, many American architectural firms are finding work in China with commissions to build challenging new buildings. The New York Times published a new article examining the opportunities being found in China with firms like Heller Manus Architects, a 25-employee firm in San Francisco, which is now doing two-thirds of its work in China. James Zhen of Goettsch Partners noted that the opportunities may be due to a shortage of Chinese architects with the qualifications to execute large-scale commercial projects. "In my opinion," he says, "what most of them are missing is not the conceptual ideas, but rather the experience and ability to turn the concept designs into reality."

An excerpt from the article:

As Americans take on Chinese clients, they are adapting to some fresh nuances in the architect-client relationship. It's a swirl of patient relationship-building, fast-track decision-making and lyrical moments that, they say, would be unusual in American business dealings.

Chris McVoy, senior partner at Steven Holl Architects in New York, says a developer in Beijing gave the firm three months to develop a concept for a high-rise housing project that replaced a Mao-era factory in the heart of the city. The firm injected into the project Mr. Holl's long-simmering ideas about urbanism, tapping the earth underneath for geothermal energy, and fixing everything it saw wrong with the dreary Soviet-inspired high-rises in Chinese cities.

"We thought they'd say, 'You're crazy, forget it,' and we'd walk away," Mr. McVoy says. "We presented to about 20 people, and when we were finished, of course they all looked to their president to respond first. He said: 'Anybody can build buildings. Few can build poetry.' "

The project was built, complete with glass bridges linking the towers like neighborhood alleys in the sky. It led to the even more radical "groundscraper" headquarters for China Vanke, a big developer based in Shenzhen in southern China. The structure is the size of the Empire State Building laid out horizontally and raised five stories off the ground to provide a public park below.

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