Don't miss this http://globalhop.indiaartndesign.com/2014/08/layered-hillscape-princes-building-china.html The architecture, landscape and interiors of the new Prince’s Building make the property a premier address for business and lifestyle in the lively Shekou district of South China… 1100sq.m.of column-free flexible floor-plates with full digital connectivity meet the demands of 21st century officeusers at this27-storey office tower. The 71,600sq.m.mixed-usedevelopment and transportation hub for China merchants is also connected to five retail pavilions via landscaped terraces that combine to create a unique naturally ventilated retail and businessdestination. The buildings sit over and adjacent to anew transportation hub that includes a bus terminal and the Sea-world subway station. Prince’s Building is located in anarea of outstanding natural beauty, surrounded by water on three sides, and mountains on the fourth – scenic layered hill-scape that has also provided the inspiration foraward-winning international design studio,SPARK’s design. Each office floor has full height glazing with spectacular ocean views over Shenzhenbay with mountain views to the North.In order to enhance the elegance of the tower’s proportions the glazed façade of the upperlevels is accentuated by slender aluminium louvres designed to catch the sun and lend alayered shifting quality to the top of the towers. The tower’s base is connected to the adjacentretail pavilions both, physically and materially at level three, where the horizontal stone façadeof the pavilions merges with the tower façade grid, anchoring the tower and bringing visualcontinuity to the entire development. The uppermost terrace is connected directly to the officetower at level three to allow office users direct year-round weather protected access. At the scale of the individual urban block, one’s experience is dominated by the five conjoined retail pavilions: four pavilions clustered around the central courtyard and the fifth - a lantern pavilion - at the heart of the triangular site. Clad in horizontally layered strips of stone inspired by therock strata of the adjacent mountains, the architectural configuration lends the a human scale to the project, allowing full integration of retail and advertising signage in synergy with the architecture. “It’s a layered,open urban retail concept,” says Stephen Pimbley “that will create a unique environment inwhich to shop, work and play.”
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architecture, landscape, interiors, SPARK, Prince’s Building, business, lifestyle, Shekou, South China, office tower,
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