2013年1月11日 星期五

The Two Sides (presentation slides)






GSD option studio: Common Framework
Instructor: Christopher Lee, Simon White(TA)
project name:
the Two Sides ( and One Common Frame Work)
Site: Xiamen, China

This project is perhaps the hardest one I've ever done. Instead of an academic school project, I considered it more of a self-dialogue that forced me bouncing between rationality, emotion, and personal political stand. As being a Taiwanese, the given topic of a "cross-strait financial district" is way too sophisticated than an architectural design. Given the fact that interactions between China and Taiwan are becoming more often, it is essential not to  let the economic interests over-shadowing the political stands, since economics is never free from politics. Under any circumstance, the sovereignty of the nation and the independence of government should be kept unharmed. Only based on this 'conditional harmony'can we then talk about the 'cooperation'.   

[Summary]
The project is situated in the CBD site of east Xiamen. Architecturally, it rethinks the space for mixing working, living, and cooperation through manipulating the urban dominant type- Qilou. From the social point of view, the project is also the manifestation of the political circumstance between Xiamen (China) and Kinmen (Taiwan).
The original park proposed by HOK cuts the site into two halves. As the interpretation of shop houses in macro scale, two rolls of residential bars, which situated in between HOK buildings from each side, stretched inward and divided existing fabric into different urban pockets, leaving a large void space on ground level. The circular shape of the void area creates a superficial symbol of unification. The office units are scattered in the circular void area. Each office unit consists of an exterior space, a transitional corridor space, an interior space, and a shared space in the back. This is another interpretation of the shop house.
Considering the issue of Cross-Strait cooperation, the project argues against the sameness of conventional CBD and the notion of unification. Though its architecture creates an absolute and trans-scaling generic common framework for the entire site, the use of different landscape and variations in accessibility creates a softness and  programmatic difference between the two sides. Within the common framework, the two sides interact. Yet through acknowledging and respecting the differences, the two sides gain benefits without decreasing their own values. That is the essence of cooperation.