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This body of work investigates alternative solutions to the conventional and widely accepted standards of urban planning models. Rather than following the Classical approach, in which urban components are organized upon a global top-down logic, ‘Intensive Differentiation’ provides an opportunity to uniquely identify new systems of urban organizations determined by communities of interacting urban-agents. Fundamentally, this speculative work operates and aligns itself along an ideological discourse based upon notions of “landscape as metaphor”. Capable of responding to transformative behaviors, much like that of microorganisms, a redetermination of landscape urbanism methods allow for identifying innovative strategies of re-structuring our highly dense urban topography.
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2014 Jeffrey S NesbitAll rights reserved
No part of this volume may be used or repoduced in any manner without written permission from the author.
All work is de ned under the direction of:Jeffrey S Nesbit
Work completed by students of:Urban Design Studio / Shanghai, Spring 2014College of Architecture, Texas Tech University
Cover design, page design, and layouts byJeffrey S Nesbit + James Cade Hammers
For more information about the Urban + Community Design Program (UCD) contact:
Jeffrey S. [email protected] or MaryAlice Torres-Macdonald, UCD [email protected]
SHANGHAI2014intensive differentiations
foreword by CHARLES WALDHEIM
jeffrey s nesbit
urban design studio
SHANGHAIurban design studioSHANGHAIurban design studioSHANGHAI
VOLUME CONTENTS
08 - Projective Ecologies, Charles Waldheim
10 - Intensive Diff erentiations, Jeff rey S. Nesbit
22 - Urban Speculations in Puxi, 2014 UCD students
94 - Review Photos
98 - Participants
102 - Acknowledgements
SHANGHAI2014urban design studioSHANGHAIurban design studioSHANGHAI
This publication and the work of the Shanghai studio that it presents is almost exclusively the practical and intellectual labor of Jeffrey Nesbit and his students in the Shanghai urban design studio at Texas Tech University College of Architecture in Spring 2014. The projects presented here offer a unique set of case studies in the relation between ecology and urbanization in East Asia. As the pace of urbanization continues across the region, and on the Mainland China in particular, much attention has been focused on the environmental and societal impacts of urban growth and change. Less attention has been devoted to the amelioration of these conditions through landscape strategies, and this studio aspires to question this imbalance. The studio is equally motivated to offer alternatives to the dominant form of the Chinese mega-plot planning framework in general, and in ecology as modality of thinking through urban sites and subjects.
In recent years increasing attention has been focused on the potential for so-called second and third-tier Chinese cities to absorb an increasing portion of the overall burden of urbanization. This has to do with a periodicity in the historic development of the national project of urbanization, as well as an acknowledgment of the social, environmental, and economic limits to healthful growth in the first tier Chinese cities. In the development of second and third-tier Chinese cities many designers and planners are presently exploring the potential for landscape architecture and ecological planning as elements of urban restructuring. In this regard the projects assembled here provide an instructive set of cases in the variable roles that landscape might play in the healthful reconsideration of the public realm as embodying specifically ecological value in first tier cities. Many of the projects focus on the reconsideration and remediation of sites left contaminated through previous industrial uses. In the best of these projects, landscape enables the urbanization of what would otherwise be inhospitable or unhealthful sites. Through the lens of ecology, these sites are reconsidered in favor of a rich combination of ecological performance, cultural heritage, and ongoing urban growth. In this regard, these projects enable the ongoing project of urbanization, by insulation populations from the worst impacts of both the previous industrial order and the current urban explosion.
The formulation projective ecologies has recently been proposed as an extension and elaboration of the landscape urbanist agenda. The projective ecologies project aspires to articulate the contemporary role and status of ecology across the design and planning disciplines. Following from and building upon the discourse around landscape urbanism and
Projective Ecologiesand the First Tier Chinese City CHARLES WALDHEIM
- 08 - urban design studio : shanghai
OUTPUT 2RATIO 1:5
ecological urbanism, the projective ecologies project asks timely questions regarding the status of ecology as an adjectival modifi er to urbanism. Christopher Hight has claimed that ecology is among the most important epistemological frameworks of our age. Hights assertion is based on the fact that ecology has transcended its origins as a natural science to encompass a range of meanings across the natural and social sciences, history and the humanities, design and the arts. From a proto-disciplinary branch of biology in the nineteenth century, ecology has developed into a modern science in the twentieth century, and increasingly toward a multidisciplinary intellectual framework in the fi rst decades of the twenty-fi rst century. This disciplinary promiscuity is not without its problems, intellectually and practically. The slippage of ecology from natural science to cultural lens remains the source of confusion and limits communication within and across landscape architecture, urban design, and planning. This ecological turn might contribute to reading the work of the Shanghai studio presented in this publication in at least three ways. First, these projects might begin by unapologetically defi ning ecologies in the plural. Second, the work explores the projective potentials of the ecological framework by illustrating fl uency across a spectrum of disciplinary formulations, well beyond the limitations of architect or urban designer alone. Finally, the projects, drawings, and diagrams presented here articulate a robust representational paradigm for the ecological in contemporary design culture more broadly.
In this regard, we might consider the impact of these projects not simply in light of their enabling of ongoing urbanization across the region, but equally as signifi cant transformations of the nature of design practice and ecological thinking globally. The new sites, situations, and speeds of urbanization across the region have propelled the emergence of new typologies of landscape project and new modes of landscape practice. In these sites and situations, an ecological reading might offer intellectual and spatial frameworks for ameliorating the worst effects of ongoing urbanization, while providing an alternative to the hegemony of the mega-plot form of development. Equally, as this work is the fi rst chapter among many to come, this approach might afford a critique of the longstanding reliance of neo-traditional urban design strategies on nineteenth century urban form.
(Charles Waldheim is John E. Irving Professor and Chair of Landscape Architecture at the Harvard Graduate School of Design.)
Richard Lucio, Reclaiming Urban Ecologies
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This studio investigates alternative solutions to the conventional and widely accepted standards of urban planning models. Rather than following the Classical approach, in which urban components are organized upon a global top-down logic, Intensive Differentiations provides an opportunity to uniquely identify new systems of urban organizations determined by communities of interacting urban-agents. Fundamentally, the studio operates and aligns itself along an ideological discourse based upon notions of landscape as metaphor. Capable of responding to transformative behaviors, much like that of microorganisms, a redetermination of landscape urbanism methods allow for identifying innovative strategies of re-structuring our highly dense urban topography.
In Field Conditions Stan Allen (1985) describes object-to-field systemic responses by evaluating how functions differ as you generate through part-to-whole or part-to-part parameters. Allen explains that a point within a network is not an independent entity nor is the relationship about the global rule sets for systems to operate as a whole. This investigation reveals that controlling the clarity of local, part-to-part interactions, will generate a more intense and flexible result. For this urban studio, we will use this logic to analyze and synthesize more integrated systems between infrastructure, buildings, and the complexity of social interactions at both the micro and macro level. No longer can we afford to engage our environments in pretending that infrastructure are sub-systems in relation to our urban public space. They must now be considered as integrated systems of exchange and operate as a series of productive urban layers.
Building to LandscapeInitial research will involve data extraction through a series of analytical mapping studies to develop a more specific understanding of current conditions. As patterns emerge from the existing fabric, the work will shift into the development of self-generating constructs that will form new field-network parameters. Continually the strategies of implementation into the site of inquiry will test sequences of urban space to building mass. This particular translation from extensive horizontal surface to expression of formal building mass should be integrated into the ontological systems schema. In other words, strategies of programmatic volumes and horizontal events will transfer and slip from one to the other.
Men of experience and foresight have predicted that in another 50 years Shanghai may become the greatest city of the world. This is not the fantastic dream of an untraveled mind. The future holds something great for Shanghai, and that greatness will outstrip all its past achievements, marvelous as they have been.
- Ching-Lin Hsia, The Status of Shanghai, 1929
Intensive DifferentiationsJEFFREY S NESBIT
- 10 - urban design studio : shanghai
CONTEXTShanghai : The Showcase CityShanghai is one of the largest metropolis in the world with over 24 million inhabitants. After major economic and financial transformations in the late 1980s and into the early 90s, the city aggressively transformed into a central international showcase city for China. Over 50 years ago and still active today, Shanghai acts as a gateway into the new urban expression based on the Chinese tactile and cultural phenomena while negotiating economic reforms, foreign investments, and exploitation of powerful international ambitions. Towards the end of the 20th century, the Shanghai Development Corporation strategically invited international architecture firms to submit urban development proposals for the Pudong district. This project, including a series of subsequent projects such as the Bund, Peoples Square, French Concession, and Nanjing Road, have incrementally created a variable identity which transpires into robust visionary manifestations. By the 21st century, China embraced Shanghai as the next great world city by officially hosting the World Expo 2010 and bringing in over 73 million visitors. The theme for the international exposition was Better City - Better Life and successfully promoted new international agendas and translated traditional Chinese culture. Although Shanghai seems to lack in consistency, upon further investigations, the city presents itself with a collection of layered patterns determined by ad hoc organizational tools and strategies. These findings will be the influence for inverting zones of inactive interference. As compelling as the intensive differentiations of old and new seem, we now need to embrace these variable difference in developing opportunities of urban connections, rather than abrasive extremities of contrast. The work of mega-development and massive investments are obviously substantial though are not the deterministic vision for future Shanghai. Rather, this studio will focus on re-configuring an urban ecology through three primary issues: (1) housing and development, (2) infrastructure (transportation and public water utilities), and (3) activation of public space. HuangpuLocated in the progressive historic center of Puxi, our particular site of inquiry is situated in the Huangpu district bounded by Zhonghua Road, Old City, and the Huangpu River. The site presents itself with primarily low-rise (2 - 3 story) old housing projects while newer high-rise development has begun encroaching into its boundaries. Close proximities include the Nanpu Bridge to the south, Pudong Financial District across the river to the north, The Bund north along the river, and Huahai highway to the north-west. These zones of contextual extensions must be considered as significant external influences from our site of inquiry zone. How do these create opportunities of connections/extensions, boundaries, and/or referential mediums?
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Ontological Systems
ontology (n.) - a branch of metaphysics concerned with the nature and relations of being
Ontology is the philosophical study of the nature of being, becoming, existence, or reality, as well as the basic categories of being and their relations. Traditionally listed as a part of the major branch of philosophy known as metaphysics, ontology deals with questions concerning what entities exist or can be said to exist, and how such entities can be grouped, related within a hierarchy, and subdivided according to similarities and differences.
system (n.) - a group of related parts that move or work together - a body of organs that work together to perform an important function of the body
A System is a set of interacting or interdependent components forming an integrated whole or a set of elements (often called components ) and relationships which are different from relationships of the set or its elements to other elements or sets.
After gathering of research materials, data, and information, we initiated the studio design work with an intensive series of NTS (not-to-scale) models, investigating systematic methods of morphology rather than geometrical regulations. These ontological systems are designed to evaluate operative logics which ultimately utilized as re-organizational processes inserted back into the city fabric. More similar to an ecology, these flexible systems create a zone of what Gilles Deleuze calls space of possibilities. As intelligent systems grow in population and variation, extensions distribute as critical negotiations. By using both Manuel DeLandas definitions developed through simulations of multi-agents and David Grahame Shanes urban codes and actors, scalar components work themselves through a strategic organizational model. Furthermore, as the systematic models strengthen in complexity and intelligence, the manipulations integrate and manifest into a more clearly controlled and organized urban methodology.
Urban Topography + Infrastructure This project addresses an on-going scholarly conversation about the urban environment through approaches taken from two disciplines; landscape architecture and urbanism. The work of Charles Waldheim and David Grahame Shane, indicates that the discipline of urban design and landscape are becoming more fully inter-connected. Thinking of the city as organism is both the foundation and the
Simon Alvarez
- 12 - urban design studio : shanghai
Jigga Patel
processes in the studio. This particular project investigates strategies of landscape urbanism, identifies existing themes of self-generative adaptations, and focuses on evaluating where/how the opportunities for horizontal extensiveness can be implemented. Formerly, infrastructures such as wetlands, sewage systems, transportation highways, and civic utilities have been regarded as tertiary, service space. Along with the ontological systems modeling, the work will question generative tools of urban transformation, as evidence of contemporary methods of re-thinking the usefulness of the public realm on, in, below, or between hard edges of large-scale urban infrastructure. The process of activating this residual space by transforming it into habitable, public space provides more effective use of the available land and advances opportunities of creating a more sustainable environment. The horizontal as a primary device for organizing and registering urban complexities create new, heightened, opportunities of urban recognition. Learning from Rem Koolhaas, James Corner, and Charles Waldheim, ideas of horizontal landscapes can translate into urban interfaces of data and information. The expression of natural conditions in relationship with city infrastructures both define scenarios of urban patterns which can not be evaluated through traditional urban planning models. The city itself demonstrates a layer of extended, transformable tissues oscillating conditions of time, economics, politics, and social agencies; or codes as D.G. Shane would describe. This is precisely why the work critical operates between morphogenetic zones of intermediary dimension and manipulates the horizontal, urban plane.
EventsAs the progress of the systematic studies and contextual analysis developed into a more cohesive narrative, implementation of events gain exposure. Rather than describing the project through a strict and definitive development program, the site of inquiry charges a more operational narrative of flexibility. Like that of Rem Koolhaas Parc de la Villette (1982), James Corners London Olympic Park (2011), and Plasma Studios Xian Flowing Gardens (2011), negotiations between the ontological system and existing conditions provide evidence for a new infiltration of urban events which shall establish opportunities of future growth, flexibility, and extensive sequencing. For clarification, growth here does not imply traditional phasing units. On the contrary, parameters will inform a space of possibility. Therefore in this studio, each projects formal event resultants are determined by the particularities of a focus critique; which includes but not limited to the contextual analysis and methodical modulations.
The subsequent projects in this volume includes a collection of samples which came out of such inquires during an Urban Design Studio at Texas Tech University in the spring of 2014.
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FRAGMENTEDENVIRONMENTSJames Cade Hammers
The study involves defining and describing tendencies revealed in the city of Shanghai, China that have generated fragmented environments located throughout the city but explicitly apparent in the Puxi district, west of the Huangpu River. The analyses provide a vocabulary to describe five characteristics of nine study samples that operate or perform their own fragmentation in response to immediate conditions. Conditions created at the juncture of the Chinese governments social or political agendas associated with the built environment and the many adaptive protocols the people inhabiting the city have produced. From this collision, these (sometimes) well-defined environments of difference then emerge, forming their sinews from networks of shifting forces that allow for their cohesion and assemblage into moments of intensive differentiation within Shanghai. Through the development of the system, the collections of entangled units simultaneously exist as and generate a field of fluctuating intensities that directly influence and disturb one another. At the extents of these intensities, there exist residual environments that are dismissed as dilapidated, decaying ruins that are still inhabited but deteriorate due to their proximity and proportion to moments of accelerated development agendas. It is these zones that can enforce their presence and rehabilitate through combinative performances that will allow them to strengthen their layer in the network of fragmented environments. In Shanghai, the zones of interest present an intense segregation in the urban landscape that brings about a contrast between both the built forms and the space of things.
- 22 - urban design studio : shanghai
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EVENT TYPOLOGIES Uses And Descriptions
The project introduces new spaces and surfaces that allow for specified or unspecified events to occur within. These events have been extracted from the observations and research documentation and fit into three primary categories: passive, active, and productive use.
PR01 - Local Ecology Garden / Productive with Restraint
Local ecology gardens are where the many vendors of independent goods are able to grow their own vegetables and fruits in season. Obviously as the seasons change or needs change, the garden may transform into a passive state and be allowed to overgrow with local fauna.
PR02 - Commercial + Retail / Productive with Low Restraint These activations host either residential or commercial towers that hold retail storefronts on ground and second levels to bring more productive use to areas suffering from little purpose
PA01 - Walk + Manipulated Infrastructure / Passive Low Adaptability A walk describes an introduced layer of pedestrian organization and infrastructural connection. A manipulated infrastructure describes a specific system of infrastructure that has been reorganized, excavated, or removed from the site to allow for the new implementation to exist.
PA02.1 - Refined Plaza + Elevated Walkway / Passive High Adaptability
A refined plaza is a public area not designated for vegetated use strictly productive events. These areas have an adaptability to what can happen there and are not limited to just the use of one event.
PA02.2 - Walkway + Canal / Productive with Low Adaptability With the popularity of selling fish as well as the need to transport goods by way of water, a new, public use canal is introduced so that fishermen and women can keep their product clean, and have a more abundant hold of fish and easily transport these and other goods to another part of the river.
AC01 - Plaza + Pavilions, Kiosks / Active with Shifting Use Pavilions and Kiosks provide these spaces with specific merchandise and other goods exchange. These spaces hold this activation with no change in performance but can change in the individuals use of the space.
S U R FA C E L E G I B I L I T Y[sur-s lej-uh-bil-i-tee]
the morphology and syntax of how the edges ofa space are formed and read as a continuation
C L U S T E R[kluhs-ter]
a number of objects of the samekind, growing or held together
C L U S T E R[kluhs-ter]
a number of objects of the samekind, growing or held together
A M B I G U O U S L I M I T S[am-big-yoo-uhs lim-its]
a condition where the extents or bounding criteriaof a zone begin to fail or become less dened
E N C R O A C H M E N T[en-krohch-muh nt]
the act of one zone being inuenced oraffected by another
A C C U M U L AT E[uh-kyoo-myuh-leyt]
become larger in size, typically as aresult of a gathering within weak or
malleable constraints
FIVE /denitions of fragmented environments
URBAN FARMING // Programming the Surface //
biodiverse surfacesurface acts as host to multiple
plant species that can be segregated, integratedor allowed to grow without intervention
local farmers marketclose proximity to crops to keep it freshvertical component available for expansion
URBAN FARMING // Programming the Surface //
biodiverse surfacesurface acts as host to multiple
plant species that can be segregated, integratedor allowed to grow without intervention
local farmers marketclose proximity to crops to keep it freshvertical component available for expansion
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new activationtower
new activationplaza + park
operative walladded walls allow for a new understanding
and definition of integration and segregationwithin the context
operative wall
in progress constructionan inevitable component of context in the city
inoperative wallthe inoperative wall is an existing condition that heightens the fragmented state of a given area, however they do not allow for added program or events to exist
local ecologiesjapanese maplechinese chestnut
Within the fragmented site, there are certain components of conflict (such as building demolition sites, 15 walls that deny physical exchange, collections of materials barricading whole streets) that restrict the development of a part-to-part relationship required for an environment to send and receive information between others so that they may react, evolve, or exchange properties. Instead the objects remain in a state of stagnancy that produces a field of non-communicating objects void of exchange.
existing tower
DNA-01 // Performances + Events- // +
DNA-02 // Performances + Events- // +
new activationplaza + park
operative walladded walls allow for a new understanding
and definition of integration and segregationwithin the context
waters edge
local ecologieschinese bamboochinese chestnut
manipulated infrastructureroadways are pushed below the surface to allow for the park and plaza to connect the river to the interior of the site
new activationdock
- 26 - urban design studio : shanghai
DNA-03 // Performances + Events- // +
new activationtower
new activationelevated walkway
inoperative wallthe inoperative wall is an existing condition that heightens the fragmented state of a given area, however they do not allow for added program or events to exist
in progress constructionan inevitable component of context in the city
existing tower
DNA-04 // Performances + Events // +
new activationplaza + park
added tower
operative walladded walls allow for a new understanding
and definition of integration and segregationwithin the context
local ecologieschinese bambooyulan magnolia
new activationdrive in market marketplace
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New Intensities
These environments were required to intensify to regain local control of building and urban programming.
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CONTINGENT URBANISMScott Russell Wooten
Shanghai is a city of cranes: Building, modifying and demolishing to accommodate a consistently evolving urban and social environment. They occupy the space between forms adding themselves to a transitory skyline as they create the more static urban landscape. The facade of this landscape is all but static, with intricate, seemingly infinite facades that are redesigned each day by the inhabitants and their push to utilize the facade however they see fit. On almost every facade, families create Ad hoc cages for an extra closet or extend a frame for clothing lines. Few projects are permanent; most are subject to change and for this reason Shanghai is a Contingent City.
This is an exploration into the potentials of utilizing the contingent nature of the city as an urban design strategy. This is done by developing a system that is infinitely adaptable and varied with respect to specific urban conditions. For example, the emergence of an ad hoc market, or the walling off of a new residential super complex. Rather than these conditions having a subconscious affect on the city they are actively used to adjust and reshape the system, allowing for the accommodation of every contingency. This is a study into embracing the transitory nature of the city instead of having two conflicting forces, one being the master plan and the other consisting of the actual contingent conditions of the urban landscape that is Shanghai.
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UTILIZING URBAN VOIDSSimon Alvarez
The investigation began with an evaluation of the rapidly expanding Shanghai Metro system. Since the first line opened in 1993, it has become one of the fastest growing rapid transit systems in the world growing to 14 metro lines with plans to expand to 22 lines spanning 877 kilometers by 2020. With almost 9 million riders annually, the expansion of the metro system is unmatched by any system in the world. The metro system began in an already existing and functioning city. In order for the metro to expand as quickly as it is, there is a system of excavation that occurs below an already existing landscape of buildings and underground systems. As this excavation occurs, a network of pathways is created by navigating around existing conditions of the underground landscape. These paths create their own networks with gravitational nodes being the metro stops. Through the creation of these paths a new landscape is created from these paths that weave and connect together at these nodes of convergence. As the network above ground continues to expand, so does the network of paths underground. As the city expands it begins to stretch out the urban fabric and create moments where the fabric ruptures and then rebuilds itself. This rebuilt edge creates void places in the fabric. It is when these are rebuilt that zones are created that could be conflictive. In a city where almost every space is occupied, its these voids that become plastic and adapt to the needs of the new space. These void spaces begin to describe what is left behind. These empty-full sequences are created by the extensivity of the existing urban fabric and the void places from the ruptures in the urban fabric. These void spaces are not spaces meant to be reinvented or re-equipped, but these voids could become spaces thatare accepted for their plastic and adaptive qualities.
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//Differentiating PATTERNS
Pattern APattern b Pattern c Pattern d
Patterns showing extents of main axis of buildings As the site gets more developedthe density of the patterns beginsto break
newly developed areas havelittle to no orthogonal organization
Region closest to the Riverhas a stronger directionalitythan the rest of the site
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EXTENSIVITY OF HARD EDGE EXTENSIVITY AXIS NEW VOID PLACE HARD EDGE VOID PLACE CENTROID NETWORK
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Site Fractures
Void territory
Void LocationsVoid Cluster Network
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Pedestrian and bicycle com-muter Paths[The connections of the agricul-tural voids serve as a pedestrian circulation path that allows the pedestrian several experiences of the same space.]
Circulation Path[These paths connect the main access routes that border the site of inquiry]
Existing Lilong[These show the stark contrast between the old housing units that are now disappearing and the new apartment towers that are being built on the site]
Intimate Public Park forest Expansion[This is meant to rehabilitate the natural plant ecologies of Southern China as well as expanding on the biodiversity of the area. This brings a new hierarchy to the center of Shanghai by explicitly bringing nature back into the center of the city.]
Existing Residential Apartment Building[This area thrives because of the dense population that formed its own distinct neighborhood. These existing buildings house most of the people that work in the area. This allows the area to form their own identity and be self sufcient.]
Individual and community scale agricultural area: wheat and corn elds [Previously unused spaces now allow for a recultivationof the land. This allows a 1:1 ratio of urban agriculture to area of developed land.]
Individual and community scale agricultural area: soybean elds[The scale of production ranges from commercial crops,to permaculture, to neighborhood scale food productionto support the local markets.]
Elevated Circulation Paths[By elevating the circulation, the use of previously unused or even unnoticed space is now essential to moving about the site.]
DNA_01
- 42 - urban design studio : shanghai
Pedestrian and bicycle com-muter Paths[The connections of the agricul-tural voids serve as a pedestrian circulation path that allows the pedestrian several experiences of the same space.]
Circulation Path[These paths connect the main access routes that border the site of inquiry]
Hardscape[The hardscape park allows for a meterial change that reects the diverse material palette being used in the new construction and older building types]
Intimate Public Park forest Expansion[This is meant to rehabilitate the natural plant ecologies of Southern China as well as expanding on the biodiversity of the area. This brings a new hierarchy to the center of Shanghai by explicitly bringing nature back into the center of the city.]
Existing Residential Area[This area thrives because of the dense population that formed its own distinct neighborhood. These existing buildings house most of the people that work in the area. This allows the area to form their own identity and be self sufcient.]
Individual and community scale agricultural area: tea eld[The scale of production ranges from commercial crops,to permaculture, to neighborhood scale food productionto support the local markets.]
DNA_02
intensive diff erentiations - 43 -
ECONOMIC VOLATILITYMatt Blake
The single most powerful driving force behind the ever-changing urban landscape of Shanghai is money. Having the best of the best and looking wealthy is as integral to the upper class Shanghai elite as it is to the citys global image. Shanghai exists where a Rolex or Omega store only a few blocks a way at any point and $200,000 Bentleys float through the dense motor scooter traffic. Wealthy businessmen are wooed at expensive and exclusive nightclubs to convince them to lean toward closing the deal. Many of these deals include major land development deals that directly affect the urban fabric of Shanghai. These urban shifts are amplified by the Chinese governments ability to manipulate the urban structure at will. Mega-corporations and land developers collude with the government to expand new development to increase the Gross Domestic Product or GDP. This is an extremely common occurrence all over the world however, Shanghai in particular has a desire to expand quickly and the government has the power to implement this progression uninhibited. Although this stimulates the economy, thousands of lower class individuals are forced out of their homes to make way for new construction.
That being said, new development pushes onward, puncturing the existing urban fabric to rapidly expand into new territory. These disruptions create oscillating conditions between new and old than is reflective of the economic tendencies of Shanghai. Just as corporations cause large economic shifts that have repercussions, the aggressive new development into the remaining portions of old Shanghai drastically alters the urban fabric as a whole.
- 44 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 45 -
- 46 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 47 -
TO PUDONG
TO BEIJING
TO LONDON
TO SEOUL
TO TOKYO
TO SYDNEY
TO LAS ANGLES
TO PARIS
TO MONACO
TO THE BRITISHVIRGIN ISLANDS
TO VANCOUVER
MASTER PLAN SCALE: 1=750M N
CENTRAL PLAZA
PRIVATE CLUB TOWER
PUBLIC PARK
FERRY TERMINAL
RESIDENTIAL & RETAIL
ISOLATED PRIVATE PARK
RIVER FRONT PARK
YACHT CLUB & MARINA
ZHO
NG
SHA
N RO
AD
- 48 - urban design studio : shanghai
TO PUDONG
TO BEIJING
TO LONDON
TO SEOUL
TO TOKYO
TO SYDNEY
TO LAS ANGLES
TO PARIS
TO MONACO
TO THE BRITISHVIRGIN ISLANDS
TO VANCOUVER
MASTER PLAN SCALE: 1=750M N
CENTRAL PLAZA
PRIVATE CLUB TOWER
PUBLIC PARK
FERRY TERMINAL
RESIDENTIAL & RETAIL
ISOLATED PRIVATE PARK
RIVER FRONT PARK
YACHT CLUB & MARINA
ZHO
NG
SHA
N RO
AD
intensive diff erentiations - 49 -
RECLAIMING URBAN ECOLOGIESRichard Lucio
Shanghai is a vibrant center for trade, economics, and culture maintaining a distinct identity that is a blend of Western and Chinese influence. The primary artery that feeds Shanghais existence is the Huangpu River. It is a source of water for the locals while also acting as the primary avenue for shipping manufactured products out of the city. The river however is heavily polluted, ranging from Class V up to Class VII pollution levels, creating a detriment to the area at large. The exponential growth of Shanghai in conjunction with the conversion of native marshlands, streams and river to hard-surface has allowed the water quality to deteriorate at alarming rates. The primary emphasis of this proposal is to re-introduce natural marshland ecologies to cultivate landscape contexts that are native to Shanghai. Said ecologies would counteract pollution levels by cleansing water through a five step filtering process. The strategy would display the filtering process and educate the community on the native systems used to clean the river water. Mutual interventions between existing site conditions and the performative topography would be intertwined via a series of paths, corridors, overpasses, tunnels, and platforms that lead people to the permeable edges of the filtering pools. The proposal is ultimately a snapshot in time regarding the potential re-introduction of filtering marshland ecologies as a factor in eradicating Shanghais water pollution epidemic while establishing a useable public space for the people of Shanghai.
- 50 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 51 -
OUTPUT 1RATIO 1:5
OUTPUT 2RATIO 1:5
OUTPUT 3RATIO 1:5
- 52 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 53 -
Wangjia Matou Rd
Wangjia Matou Rd
Dongjiadu Rd
Zong
hua
Rd
Shachang Rd
Shachang Rd
Zixia Rd
Wan
gjia
zuiji
ao S
t
Wan
gjia
zuiji
ao S
t
Miezhu Rd
Miezhu Rd
1
23
4
5
5
5
5
6
7
78
9
9
9
10
10
11
12
13
13
13
14
14
14
15
16
1. 2. 3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15.16.
boat dockspublic space |passive|elevated performance plaza |active|ecological interpretive center |productive|water run-o inletpavilion |passive|boardwalk |passive|aquatic life thresholdwild life habitat |productive|pond gardens |passive|wildlife observation deck |productive|shing shore bank |active|oating gardens |passive|crop gardens |productive|passenger ferry docksthe cool docks
LUPUBRIDGE
NANP
UBR
IDGE
LU JIA BANG RD.
SOUT
H PU
DO
NG R
D.
SOU
TH PU
DO
NG
RD.
LONG YANG RD.
ZHANGJIA BANG
BAILIA
N
CHUANYANG HE
DIANPU HE
LONG
HUA
GANG
EAST ZHO
NG
SHAN
NO
. 2 RD.
EAST ZH
ON
G SH
AN
NO
. 1 RD.
MID
DLE H
E NA
N RD
.
MID
DLE SI CH
UA
N RD
.
EAST BEI J
ING RD.
DA MIN
G RD.
SUZHOU CREEK
LUBAN RD.
LING L
ING RD
.
EAST NAN
JING RD.
FU ZHOU R
D.
EAST YAN
AN RD.
RENMIN RD.
YANG
PUBR
IDGE
EAST YAN AN RD. TUNNEL
SOUT
H ZHO
NG SH
AN RD
.
HUANGPU RIVER
HUAN
GPU
RIVER
HUANGPU RIVER
HUAN
GPU R
IVER
HU
AN
GPU
RIVER
SOU
TH H
E NAN
RD.
LUOSHAN RD.
ZHANGYAN
G RD.
YANGSHUPU GANG
JIANGPU RD.
YANGJING GANG
NINGGUO RD.
JUNGGONG RD.
KONG
JIANG
RD.
DONGDAMING RD.
YANG
SHUP
U RD.
LONGCHANG RD.
DO
NG
TANG
RD.
BEI RD.
DONGGOU GANG
JIANG
Main Water Course
Inltration Wetlands
Inltration Wetlands
Inltration Wetlands
Storm Water Catchment
Main Water Course
Main Water Course
River Feed
River Feed
River Feed
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Huangpu River
Huangpu River
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
A
B
Flow
of W
ater
Cur
rent
To Pudo
ng
To Zhangjiabang Canal
To N
anpu
Brid
ge
To the North Bund
Flow
of W
ater
Cur
rent
Scale: 1:750 mShanghai 2014
1) Sediment Ponds
1) Sediment Ponds
2) Terraced Wetland
3) Filtering Wetland Bands
4) Sand for Filtering Water
5) Cleansed Water Reservoir
5) Cleansed Water Reservoir
Ecological Interpretive Center:Educating about the native marshlandecologies that are being employed tolter and cleanse the polluted HuangpuRiver water.
Pavilion:A non-enclosed volume that is formed by the path striations.the pavilion opens onto a largepublic space.
Elevated Performance Plaza:Vegetated platforms that connectto provide an open public space toallow for cultural events and performances.
Constructed Water Inlet
Master Plan
Elevated Surfaces
Xiao
nanm
en S
tatio
nLi
ne 9
river current directioncirculation access pointstunnel roadferry path directioncirculation ow directionriver water inlet owexposed striation patternhidden striation patternhidden topography facetswater drainage ow
mount
Water Filtering Plants + Decorative Trees
thalia
river club-rush
bulrush
papyrus rush
aquatic canna
foxnut
thalia
river club-rush
pickerel weed
arrowhead
manchurian wild rice
japanese roof iris
umbrella papyri
small reedmace
common reed
maiden grass
chinese plum tree
japanese cherry tree
weeping chinese cypress
yulan magnolia
Shanghai
Site of Inquiry
RECLAIMING URBAN ECOLOGIES
- 54 - urban design studio : shanghai
123
4
5
5
5
5
6
7
78
9
9
9
10
10
11
12
13
13
13
14
14
14
15
16
1. 2. 3.4.5.6.7.8.9.10.11.12.13.14.15.16.
boat dockspublic space |passive|elevated performance plaza |active|ecological interpretive center |productive|water run-o inletpavilion |passive|boardwalk |passive|aquatic life thresholdwild life habitat |productive|pond gardens |passive|wildlife observation deck |productive|shing shore bank |active|oating gardens |passive|crop gardens |productive|passenger ferry docksthe cool docks
LUPUBRIDGE
NANP
UBR
IDGE
LU JIA BANG RD.
SOUT
H PU
DO
NG R
D.
SOU
TH PU
DO
NG
RD.
LONG YANG RD.
ZHANGJIA BANG
BAILIA
N
CHUANYANG HE
DIANPU HE
LONG
HUA
GANG
EAST ZHO
NG
SHAN
NO
. 2 RD.
EAST ZH
ON
G SH
AN
NO
. 1 RD.
MID
DLE H
E NA
N RD
.
MID
DLE SI CH
UA
N RD
.
EAST BEI J
ING RD.
DA MIN
G RD.
SUZHOU CREEK
LUBAN RD.
LING L
ING RD
.
EAST NAN
JING RD.
FU ZHOU R
D.
EAST YAN
AN RD.
RENMIN RD.
YANG
PUBR
IDGE
EAST YAN AN RD. TUNNEL
SOUT
H ZHO
NG SH
AN RD
.
HUANGPU RIVER
HUAN
GPU
RIVER
HUANGPU RIVER
HUAN
GPU R
IVER
HU
AN
GPU
RIVER
SOU
TH H
E NAN
RD.
LUOSHAN RD.
ZHANGYAN
G RD.
YANGSHUPU GANG
JIANGPU RD.
YANGJING GANG
NINGGUO RD.
JUNGGONG RD.
KONG
JIANG
RD.
DONGDAMING RD.
YANG
SHUP
U RD.
LONGCHANG RD.
DO
NG
TANG
RD.
BEI RD.
DONGGOU GANG
JIANG
Main Water Course
Inltration Wetlands
Inltration Wetlands
Inltration Wetlands
Storm Water Catchment
Main Water Course
Main Water Course
River Feed
River Feed
River Feed
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Huangpu River
Huangpu River
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
Bio Swale
A
B
Flow
of W
ater
Cur
rent
To Pudo
ng
To Zhangjiabang Canal
To N
anpu
Brid
ge
To the North Bund
Flow
of W
ater
Cur
rent
Scale: 1:750 mShanghai 2014
1) Sediment Ponds
1) Sediment Ponds
2) Terraced Wetland
3) Filtering Wetland Bands
4) Sand for Filtering Water
5) Cleansed Water Reservoir
5) Cleansed Water Reservoir
Ecological Interpretive Center:Educating about the native marshlandecologies that are being employed tolter and cleanse the polluted HuangpuRiver water.
Pavilion:A non-enclosed volume that is formed by the path striations.the pavilion opens onto a largepublic space.
Elevated Performance Plaza:Vegetated platforms that connectto provide an open public space toallow for cultural events and performances.
Constructed Water Inlet
Master Plan
Elevated Surfaces
Xiao
nanm
en S
tatio
nLi
ne 9
river current directioncirculation access pointstunnel roadferry path directioncirculation ow directionriver water inlet owexposed striation patternhidden striation patternhidden topography facetswater drainage ow
mount
Water Filtering Plants + Decorative Trees
thalia
river club-rush
bulrush
papyrus rush
aquatic canna
foxnut
thalia
river club-rush
pickerel weed
arrowhead
manchurian wild rice
japanese roof iris
umbrella papyri
small reedmace
common reed
maiden grass
chinese plum tree
japanese cherry tree
weeping chinese cypress
yulan magnolia
Shanghai
Site of Inquiry
RECLAIMING URBAN ECOLOGIES
intensive diff erentiations - 55 -
- 56 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 57 -
NIP / TUCKJigga Patel
Those undergoing cosmetic surgery fall into a wide gamut of individuals with a wide range of needs and desires. However, it must be noted that with the proliferation of cosmetic surgeries, a sense of normalcy has been skewed to an environment where only a small percentage of individuals can attain perfection through non-surgical means, and the larger percentage achieving their personal goals and desires by going under the knife. With aesthetic beauty serving as a requirement for success in many fields, there has been a sharp rise in operations catered to those who must maintain an optimal physical appearance in order to succeed (or even compete). In the end, we are left to question notions of beauty and how it is achieved within a society peering through warped lens. In order to begin a discussion on beauty and notions of duality within current society, several Cosmetic and Reconstructive Surgery Centers are utilized within the project. Located in Shanghai, China, the facilities will focus on the physical, the associated psychological care of patients, and the development of surgical care techniques in cosmetic and reconstructive surgery. To confront the often conflicting aims of the public and private realm, this project includes the development of three primary event types; active, passive, and productive. The event types act to transition and/or juxtapose the private facilities with the surrounding public landscape. This project ranges in scale from the master plan to the detail, oscillating between extremes of scale as required to enable the investigation.
- 58 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 59 -
URBAN IMPLEMENTATION PLAN // Performative Topography + Events // +
LEVEL 1 // productive1 //
LEVEL 2 // passive2 //
LEVEL 3 // active3 //
LEVEL 4 // infrastructure4 //
LEVEL 5 // surgical facilities5 //
- 60 - urban design studio : shanghai
URBAN IMPLEMENTATION PLAN // Performative Topography + Events // +
LEVEL 1 // productive1 //
LEVEL 2 // passive2 //
LEVEL 3 // active3 //
LEVEL 4 // infrastructure4 //
LEVEL 5 // surgical facilities5 //
intensive differentiations - 61 -
- 62 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 63 -
- 64 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 65 -
COMMUNAL POCKETSAnaelisse Elias
For centuries in China, more specifically Shanghai, communal lifestyles have dominated. Families have aspired to house many generations under one roof. This has created a culture of communalism, encouraging children to put the group first and themselves second. But because of the rapid urban and economic growth of the city, this sense of communalism is being lost and a more individualistic china is emerging.
Many Chinese like to do things together, from washing dishes to watching TV. At home, at work, and at school, people are encouraged to do things as a group. This is a culture where people often put the group first and personal space second. This type of living though is not just about socializing with each other, but it is also about sharing. In many Chinese neighborhoods, people are often required to share toilets, and other water facilities between many families.
Communalism in Shanghai is dying because of the rapid urban and economic growth of the city. Many families have been forced to relocate to new towers in order to redevelop the area where their home is. But often, once people move into the towers that sense of communalism disappears. Many dont even have an idea of who their neighbors are, leading to a more individualistic lifestyle.Communal living in Shanghai is disappearing and people are being forced to adapt to a new lifestyle, individualism. From a western point of view this can be completely normal, but from an eastern perspective it can be more shocking. Many are not only having their homes taken away, but also their friends, families, lifestyles and memories.
- 66 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 67 -
urban farming / fruit trees
living communities
semi private community spaces
community produce garden
public plaza (various events)
public plaza (various events)
bike and pedestrian pathways
Not To ScaleShanghai 2014DNA 1
public / social plaza
living communities
urban farming
public / social plaza
public plaza(various events)
bike and pedestrian pathways
community markets
Not To ScaleShanghai 2014DNA 2
- 68 - urban design studio : shanghai
market / commercial area public plazas sem
i-priv
ate
plaz
as
semi-private plazas public parkrow housescommunal
gardenrow
houses row
hou
ses
Scale: 1:750 mShanghai 2014Longitudinal Section
row houses row housescom
mun
al g
arde
n
sem
i-priv
ate
gard
en
public plazasem
i-priv
ate
plaz
a
surrounding areasurrounding area
Scale: 1:750 mShanghai 2014Transverse Section
circulation
housing communities
relationship between markets, produce gardens in the community
zoning
row houses
semi-privatesocial areas
vegetation
markets
produce garden& urban farming
main circulationpaths
Concept DiagramsShanghai 2014Not To Scale
produce gardens
residential / semi-private (social) area
transition area
socail / public area commercial / public areacommercial space may also be used to socialize
markets
row houses
intensive diff erentiations - 69 -
FUTUREMEMORIESGilbert Perez
Initially upon arriving in Shanghai China, the original focus critique derived from the broken street facade. Looking upon various cities like New York, Rome, and Dubai, (just as examples) there is a sense of logic which organizes the layout of urban infrastructures,parks, plazas and dwellings. There lies an inherent and continuous repetition of fluidity from structure to street, from street to sidewalks, etc. For the site of Inquiry located in Shanghai China, this is not the case. Because of Shanghais ability to demolish buildings through such careless means, the old city of Shanghai is quickly vanishing, leaving nothing but debris and faint memories of what once was. The site of inquiry contains various locations where demolition has occurred. Within these locations lie a disruption of fluidity within the site and its fragmented facade. Demolition causes disruptions and leaves void where there was once memory. Essentially the critique evolved, much like the city has over the years, after having visited the site of inquiry. The people that live in the residential areas on site are content with their surroundings and accept their living conditions as is, as a way of life. Venturing through the site, there are many special moments that one experience. Hidden paths which connect throughout the entire site expand and create unique spaces. The existing structures have aged over time and obtained a unique patina which expresses the citys historical memories. The overall goal of the proposal is to recreate active and productive spaces using what already exists, not to be preserved for historical values but rather for experiential values.
- 70 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 71 -
WATER FRONT ACTIVITES
FUTURE MEMORIES DNA I
BUSINESS OFFICE PLAZARESIDENTIALCOMMUNITY SPACEMIXED USE BUSINESSESOUTDOOR SEATING AND RESTUARANTPARK AND PARKINGMETRO ENTRANCE
WATER FRONT ACTIVITES
FUTURE MEMORIES DNA II
HIGH RISE RESIDENTIALPARKINGRETAILMIXED USEDHOTELOUTDOOR SHOPPING/ VENDORSFUTURE MEMORIES MALL PARK
- 72 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 73 -
COLLAGEDECOLOGIESAnnette Bajema
As she exits the subway, wind carries the smell of dumplings, the laughter of groups crowed around the Mahjong table, and the distant drill of construction. Looking across the street, she saw the familiar sprawling market, mingling with open green space dotted with trees and benches. Small gardens are starting to bloom, being carefully attended by some of the women living in the shukimens nearby. Walking through the market, each tent provides shade for local artisans, and street venders that have been living in this neighborhood since she could remember. The windows of the upper level apartments are open, displaying laundry on lines cross crossing overhead and small faces peaking out the window. Continuing through the alley between the patchwork of walls that make up the growing neighborhood, doors open up onto the street, displaying some shop, workshops, and any other facets of life. If she looked closely, she could still find the seam between the original walls and the walls made of the recycled bricks form demolished buildings from the demolition site a few blocks down. Tin, bricks, tiles, and wood flesh out the once disintegrating skeletons of the historic housing, creating new community space out of the rubble. She enjoyed the exotic smell of Bar-B-Que, looking through the windows into the nice stores, and the shaded seating areas taking full advantage of the view. At the waters edge, the buildings shift from new materials back to the familiar materials of the neighborhood and stretches out over the water. Boats dock here to take advantage of the shopping and food available around the public plaza formed. Sitting on a bench on the edge of the dock, she let her mind wonder over the captivating Shanghai skyline.
- 74 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 75 -
DNA_01 RECYCLED MATERIAL_01_A BLUE TIN
RECYCLED MATERIAL_02_A GRAY BRICK
RECYCLED MATERIAL_01_B GRAY TIN
RECYCLED MATERIAL_02_B RED BRICK
HYBRID TYPE_02_F NEW OLD SURFACE:OLD BUILDING OPEN
HYBRID TYPE_02_F NEW OLD SURFACE:OLD BUILDING CLOSED
HYBRID TYPE_02_F NEW OLD SURFACE:OLD BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE_02_D NEW OLD SURFACE:NEW PUBLIC SPACE
HYBRID TYPE_03_B NEW NEW SURFACE:NEW PUBLIC SPACE
HYBRID TYPE_03_A NEW NEW SURFACE::OLD BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE_03_B NEW NEW SURFACE:RUBBLE
HYBRID TYPE 01: OLD OLD A) SURFACE 1: EXISTING LANDSCAPE B) SURFACE 2: RUBBLE C) SURFACE 3: DEMO D) SURFACE 4: NEW LANDSCAPE E) SURFACE 5:NEW BUILDING F) SURFACE 6: EXISTING BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE 02: OLD NEW A) SURFACE 1: EXISTING LANDSCAPE B) SURFACE 2: RUBBLE C) SURFACE 3: DEMO D) SURFACE 4: NEW LANDSCAPE E) SURFACE 5:NEW BUILDING F) SURFACE 6: EXISTING BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE 03: NEW NEW A) SURFACE 1: EXISTING LANDSCAPE B) SURFACE 2: RUBBLE C) SURFACE 3: DEMO D) SURFACE 4: NEW LANDSCAPE E) SURFACE 5:NEW BUILDING F) SURFACE 6: EXISTING BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE_02_F NEW OLD SURFACE:EXISITING BUILDING
DNA_03HYBRID TYPE 01: OLD OLD A) SURFACE 1: EXISTING LANDSCAPE B) SURFACE 2: RUBBLE C) SURFACE 3: DEMO D) SURFACE 4: NEW LANDSCAPE E) SURFACE 5:NEW BUILDING F) SURFACE 6: EXISTING BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE 02: OLD NEW A) SURFACE 1: EXISTING LANDSCAPE B) SURFACE 2: RUBBLE C) SURFACE 3: DEMO D) SURFACE 4: NEW LANDSCAPE E) SURFACE 5:NEW BUILDING F) SURFACE 6: EXISTING BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE 03: NEW NEW A) SURFACE 1: EXISTING LANDSCAPE B) SURFACE 2: RUBBLE C) SURFACE 3: DEMO D) SURFACE 4: NEW LANDSCAPE E) SURFACE 5:NEW BUILDING F) SURFACE 6: EXISTING BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE_02_F NEW OLD SURFACE:EXISITING BUILDING
HYBRID TYPE_03_B NEW NEW SURFACE: RUBBLE
RECYCLED MATERIAL_01_C RED TIN
RECYCLED MATERIAL_04_A ROOF TILES
RECYCLED MATERIAL_02_DWEATHERD BRICK
RECYCLED MATERIAL_03_B LIGHT WOOD
RECYCLED MATERIAL_05_A STONE
HYBRID TYPE_03_E NEW NEW SURFACE: NEW BUILDING
- 76 - urban design studio : shanghai
PRODUCTIVE_01
MARKET
HYBRID_02
ACTIVE_01
STREET
HYBRID_03
ACTIVE_01
STREET
HYBRID_02 HYBRID_03
PRODUCTIVE_01
MARKET
WORKSHOP RESTAURANT
HOUSING
PUDUNG
LONG SECTION_01
THE COOL DOCKS
THE BANK OF SHANGHAI
TURTLE RESCUE
PRODUCTIVE_01
MARKET
HOUSING
HYBRID_02
HYBRID_03
SECTION_01
HOUSING_01 NEW
PRODUCTIVE_01 MARKET
HOUSING_02 EXISTING
SECTION_02
HOUSING_02 EXISTING
PRODUCTIVE_01 MARKET
ACTIVE_01 STREET
HYBRID_02HYBRID_03
intensive differentiations - 77 -
PHASE-LESSSHANGHAIDavid Isern
As a city Shanghai has embarked in an ever changing, multifaceted, and diverse culture. From the French concession of the 1920s to the American housing development, and the fast industrial outbreaks that the city has within, all happens with a constant changing phases. Shanghai will keep changing for centuries to go. Its rapid growth creates a phase-less city that inherently leads to have a phase-less identity. Regardless of what it is done to the city, Shanghai will keep changing; new instantaneous moments will keep occurring and outbreaks of the city living will keep permeating Shanghai. This will ultimately maintain the medley of features of the city and not allow for a singular identify to be ever created over a period of time. It can be said, therefore, that Shanghais identity is that it has no identifiable identity. This is true in the Site of Inquiry, where despite any changes that have occurred on the city over the years, the space and the vivacity of the voids are simple phase-less and unidentifiable.
Therefore, with this fast changing spaces of the city many of the spaces of plasticity are created, nestled in-between outburst of the phase-less-ness. These can start to create and maintain and identity. Clusters start to become space of possibilities that allows for identity to be created and maintain not as a singular unit but as a continuous collection of dissimilar identities that create the city itself. All of this occurs in a negation between the citys speed, the city spaces, and the voids within. It is at this moment that the city can unveil its true identity, itself.
Shanghai as a city can keep operating at its fast pace, and utilizing the speed and the phase less changes as the driving force for the city to find its own identity.
- 78 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 79 -
- 80 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 81 -
- 82 - urban design studio : shanghai
intensive differentiations - 83 -
THE URBAN CREASEValeria Sierra
With a shift towards urban tendencies, Shanghai has reached a point of intensive differentiation due to its fast growing urban sprawl. With a population increase of 40% seen between the past 15 years, Shanghai has seen a large shift in its agricultural affinities. The percentage of agriculture land use decreased from 71.45% to 41.32%, while the urban land-use held 18.2% in 1994 yet rose to 41.9% in 2000 (Wang, MedLine). The city has grown so rapidly it very quickly decreased its agricultural terrain towards a more modern landscape of the city. In the collision of tensions and forces, the now urban land is left with a crease caused by the scenario of these clashing conflicts.
The crease is caused by strain in the programmatic spaces causing the terrain to fold. The continuity between the spaces and forces allows for the fold to wrap and unwrap. Cultivating both aspects of what makes up Shanghai, the urban crease responds to the intermediate space that occurs in the collision. The site located opposite the financial district of Shanghai, amidst the tallest towers, feeds the extreme difference between urban land and rural land, combining them in an ecological coexistence. The field will then be irrigated with potential: that is to say, architecture and infrastructure create concentrations of density that in turn trigger concentrations of activity. Shanghais transformable terrain becomes a canvas for its volatile folds, creasing the transition to a rapid growing urban environment.
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intensive differentiations - 85 -
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SYNTHETIC SENSITIVITIES Taylor Patton
Alien interference causes disruption, but also creates new evolutions. These Collisions create a series of oscillations that are consistently conflicting with one another. These oscillations are developed by direct and indirect conflicts. They do not necessarily have to touch one another in order for a conflict to arise. The presence or the encroachment upon the existing condition enforces engagements between one another. A majority of the conflicts resolve in one condition overcoming the other, whether it is subtle or complete domination, but in some cases the engagements stay in constant balance. Even though they are not able to claim superiority, indentations are placed as a result of this conflict. In particular to Shanghai, the developed are dominating over the neglected Lilongs causing social and economical conflicts between the two. These conflicts create a wide range of agitated surfaces that are particularly sensitive to the existing site conditions. The new Synthetic Surface enhancesthe life of the neglected rather than destroying the social and cultural atmosphere that is already presented.
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Insertion [path]
Unhabitable Structure
Event : Insertion[Method] Synthetic Surface Inserts / Punctures through the once unhabitable structure in order to develop new social interaction between user and structure.
Event : Subtraction[Method] Synthetic Surface Engages and occupies the void left behind from construc-tion. Blurs the line between private and public space. The user is able to inhabit the Lilong without actually interfering the private spaces.
Existing Structure [private]
Subtraction [engages]
Synthetic Surface[viewing platform / courtyard]
Existing Structure [private]
Subtraction [engages]
Synthetic Surface[viewing platform / courtyard]
Isolation[encroachment]
Existing Structure [private]
Synthetic Surface[viewing platform / courtyard]
Enhance Social / Public Interaction
Event : Isolation[Method] Synthetic Surface Encroaches but never fully Engages the Lilong. Creates tension between the new surface and the existing structure. Enhances existing public social interaction.
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Insertion [path]
Unhabitable Structure
Event : Insertion[Method] Synthetic Surface Inserts / Punctures through the once unhabitable structure in order to develop new social interaction between user and structure.
Event : Subtraction[Method] Synthetic Surface Engages and occupies the void left behind from construc-tion. Blurs the line between private and public space. The user is able to inhabit the Lilong without actually interfering the private spaces.
Existing Structure [private]
Subtraction [engages]
Synthetic Surface[viewing platform / courtyard]
Isolation[encroachment]
Existing Structure [private]
Synthetic Surface[viewing platform / courtyard]
Enhance Social / Public Interaction
Event : Isolation[Method] Synthetic Surface Encroaches but never fully Engages the Lilong. Creates tension between the new surface and the existing structure. Enhances existing public social interaction.
intensive diff erentiations - 91 -
Huangpu River
Existing BuildingElevated Path [above]Market Row [below]
Fishing Pond / Wetland EcologiesPond / Wetlands
Hike / Bike TrailWoodland Ecologies
Pond / Wetlands
Longitudinal A [1 : 750]
Elevated Pathway [above]Farmers Market [below]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Existing BuildingPark / Garden
Pond / WetlandsSoccer Field
Recreational Facility
Transverse C [1 : 750]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Recreational Facility
Interpretive Center
Existing Apartments
Existing Building
Park / Garden
Elevated Path [above]Market Row [below]
Fishing Pond / Wetland Ecologies
Transverse D [1 : 750]
Event : Imbrication / IndendationPath / Park / Market / Pier / Pond
Huangpu River
Existing BuildingElevated Path [above]Market Row [below]
Fishing Pond / Wetland EcologiesPond / Wetlands
Hike / Bike TrailWoodland Ecologies
Pond / Wetlands
Longitudinal A [1 : 750]
Elevated Pathway [above]Farmers Market [below]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Existing BuildingPark / Garden
Pond / WetlandsSoccer Field
Recreational Facility
Transverse C [1 : 750]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Recreational Facility
Interpretive Center
Existing Apartments
Existing Building
Park / Garden
Elevated Path [above]Market Row [below]
Fishing Pond / Wetland Ecologies
Transverse D [1 : 750]
Event : Imbrication / IndendationPath / Park / Market / Pier / Pond
Huangpu River
Existing BuildingElevated Path [above]Market Row [below]
Fishing Pond / Wetland EcologiesPond / Wetlands
Hike / Bike TrailWoodland Ecologies
Pond / Wetlands
Longitudinal A [1 : 750]
Elevated Pathway [above]Farmers Market [below]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Existing BuildingPark / Garden
Pond / WetlandsSoccer Field
Recreational Facility
Transverse C [1 : 750]
Event : AdditionApartment / LoftsPublic Plaza [level 1]
Recreational Facility
Interpretive Center
Existing Apartments
Existing Building
Park / Garden
Elevated Path [above]Market Row [below]
Fishing Pond / Wetland Ecologies
Transverse D [1 : 750]
Event : Imbrication / IndendationPath / Park / Market / Pier / Pond
Pier
Huangpu River
Picnic / ParkManicured EcologyWoodland Ecology
Elevated Pathway
Planted Facade
Zhongshan South Road
Access from Street
Fishing PondWetland Ecologies
Manicured Ecology
Park / Playground
Farmers Market
Event : Imbrication / IndendationPath / Park / Market / Pier / Pond
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Review Photographs by Denny Mingus
intensive differentiations - 95 -
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Review Photographs by Denny Mingus
intensive differentiations - 97 -
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intensive differentiations - 99 -
Jeffrey S Nesbit holds a Master of Architecture from the University of Pennsylvania, and a first Master of Architecture and Bachelor of Science in Architecture from Texas Tech University. Nesbit is the founding director of Haecceitas Studio and currently teaches design studios and seminars on urban theory at Texas Tech University along with an architecture studio abroad in Seoul Korea. His work focuses on the investigations of urban organizational strategies based upon the generation and evolution of topological behaviors. Furthermore, Nesbit has concentrated his architectural inquiry into issues of urbanism and the constructed landscapes, through projects such as the waterfront landscapes of downtown Detroit, the post-industrial sanitation site in West Harlem, New York City, and more recently his research in megalopolis of Northeast Asia. Nesbit has received various honors for both his works and research, including gallery exhibitions in Philadelphia, New York City, Beijing, and Seoul.
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2014 Participating Students:
Simon ALVAREZAnnette BAJEMA
Matthew BLAKEAnaelisse ELIAS
James HAMMERSDavid ISERN
Richard LUCIOJigga PATEL
Taylor PATTONGilbert PEREZValeria SIERRA
Scott WOOTEN
intensive diff erentiations - 101 -
Jerry Del Fierro and Effi e Yu (Neri & Hu, Shanghai) Tien-Hao Lin and Scott DeLoache (5+ Design, Shanghai) Ricky Hele, (RAHDBS, Shanghai) Yang Nan (Aedas, Beijing) Carl Wen (Beijing) Charles Waldheim (Urban Agency, Boston) Elizabeth Mcdaniel (TTU Study Abroad) Denny Mingus (TTU)
FINAL REVIEW JURORS:
John Cays (NJIT)John Clegg (Page/)David Driskill (TTU)Kevin McClellan (UTSA, Tex-Fab)Victoria McReynolds (TTU)Christian Pongratz (TTU)Martha Skinner (Clemson)
Dustin White (TTU)
ACKNOWLEDGMENTSSPECIAL THANKS TO INDIVIDUALS WHO AIDED THE STUDIO
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