• Find Designer
  • Designers Online
  • News Blog
  • Gallery
  • 3D Models
  • HQ Textures
  • Documentation
  • Vacancies
 

Find Interior Designer

Our base contains 195 000 + architects and designers from 210 countries. Explore artworks or search professionals in your area!
 

Show Your Artworks

Archibase Planet allows you to compose your personal block and expose you artworks to the CAD community and potential customers
 

Download Free Stuff

Find and download useful 3D stuff: 3D Models, HQ Textures, CAD and 3D Documentation, Manuals and more
Forgot Password | Registration
Follow Archibase Planet on YouTube
Follow Archibase Planet Instagram
Search
Partners
RITM-X
Ritmxoid
Free 3D Models

Sunlitun SOHO, Beijing, China

Sunlitun SOHO, Beijing, China
Sanlitun SOHO will be one of the largest commercial and residential complexes available for sale in central Beijing. The current main stream for urban development in the world is the combination of super-skyscrapers and plazas, however the architects for this scheme tried to reproduce a human-scale, maze-like space within the city by using medium rise architectures.

The project is divided into the South district and the North district. For the South District, a Chinese street style called Hutongs was referred to. The street is slightly curved and twisted to produce the maze-like characteristic. For the North district, a courtyard house called Siheyuan was referred to. Two enclosures were created, the exterior and inner enclosure, and at the center of the two enclosures, a sunkun garden with dense plants was designed. To realize human-scale spaces that existed in the Hutongs and the Siheyuan, large and plain surfaces were avoided for the skin of the architecture. The skin was divided into smaller mosaic spanels. For the details of each individual panel, the architects tried to create an expression which would change depending on the condition of the light, similar to the skin of a creature, by using acrylic bars with multiple colors and ceramic printing technique with patterns modified from Chinese traditional lattice screen.
Posted by: 3D-Archive | 09/05/2008 11:28
Login to comment this entry
Find Designer | Designers Online | News Blog | Gallery | 3D Models | HQ Textures | Documentation
| Vacancies
ArchiBase.co © 2001-2025| Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Contact Us
All Images and Objects are the property of their Respective Owners