architect: David Chipperfield Architects

location: Hangzhou, China

year: 2015

Xixi, a national wetland park located on the outskirts of Hangzhou, is a built landscape and an area of nature, which has been shaped by man for over a thousand years. The omnipresent relationship between landscape, architecture, and water is key to the atmosphere in Xixi. This atmosphere has been integrated into a new development of apartment buildings. The apartment buildings are surrounded by a water garden, which, as a reference to the wetland park, is a mostly wild landscape. In contrast to these green surroundings, the buildings appear as dark stone volumes embedded in the water garden. They are, as is typical for villages in Xixi, placed on a stone plinth that sits in the water. This plinth forms the base of a village group with various levels, walls, and balustrades creating a sequence of exterior spaces, which enable access to the buildings. The interiors are characterised by floating spaces. Room height windows allow for natural light and views over the water garden.

Completion 2015
Gross floor area 11,800 m2
Client Hangzhou Westbrook Investment Co. Ltd.
Architect David Chipperfield Architects Berlin, Shanghai
Design Mark Randel – Partner
Project management Libin Chen – Partner
Project architects
Ilona Priwitzer – Concept design to Design development
Manh Kinh Tran – Design development to Construction documentation
Sascha Jung – Construction documentation
Samson Adjei – Construction documentation, Site design supervision
Project team Maoxue Li, Mirjam von Busch, Jiacong Yang
Landscape architect Belt & Collins, Singapore
Structural engineer ECADI (East China Architecture and Design Institute), Shanghai
Photography Simon Menges