flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

First look: KPF's designs for DreamWorks in the massive Shanghai DreamCenter

First look: KPF's designs for DreamWorks in the massive Shanghai DreamCenter

Two blocks of offices will be centerpiece of new cultural and lifestyle district in the West Bund Media Port.


By Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates | April 11, 2014

International architecture firm Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF) is pleased to unveil designs for DreamWorks Asia Headquarters, Oriental Dreamworks and creative offices in the new Shanghai DreamCenter, which constitutes one of the most exciting projects in China.

Located along the riverside in Xuhui District, the 463,000-square-meter DreamCenter is an integrated cultural and lifestyle landmark that will feature performing arts spaces, creative media spaces, black box and imax theaters, as well as world-class entertainment, fashionable retail areas and premium restaurants and bars.

“Together with the West Bund Media Port, this will become the world’s third great urban center for entertainment and arts alongside New York’s Broadway and London’s West End,” said DreamWorks Animation CEO Jeffrey Katzenberg. With offices on New York’s 42nd Street and in London’s Covent Garden, KPF is quite literally ‘in’ show business and has come to know what makes such creative capitals tick. In the words of KPF Principal Paul Katz, “We also know first-hand the value of locating in such creative cores, for our process, our staff, and our work as architects.”

A collaboration between Hong Kong Lan Kwai Fong Group, DreamWorks Animation and Shanghai China Media Capital, the DreamCenter is the flagship project of Shanghai’s West Bund Media Port, a large-scale development focused on creative and digital media, technology, and cultural industries.

 

 

Katz commented, “We’ve watched Shanghai develop into a global city. And now, three visionaries, three of the most influential shapers of global culture in the 21st century are coming together to create its creative hub: Jeffrey Katzenberg, who heads one of the most influential studios in the industry; Allan Zeman, who has made such a huge contribution to Hong Kong, including the development of Lan Kwai Fong in HK and now China, which transformed the culture of public space and demonstrated a new respect for international lifestyle and world-class entertainment; and Li Ruigang, the visionary who has punctuated the evolution of China’s media and entertainment industry.  In 20 years, Shanghai has transformed itself from an agrarian-based economy to one of the leading post-industrial economies in Asia. The DreamCenter project will further define Shanghai’s role as a global meeting-place for creative industry, technology, entertainment, and culture.”

Through the revitalization of the hundred-year-old former cement factory and other industrial artifacts into iconic creative live performance venues and F&B facilities, DreamCenter blends together the site’s industrial and cultural history with modern architecture, offering an unseen experience for the people of Shanghai and international tourists.

 

 

KPF’s two-block design represents the creative heart of the master plan—and its largest district. The eastern block is home to a pair of creative office towers, a theater building and arts building, whose open-air rooftop features a sculpture garden. The western block features a pair of towers (DreamCenter’s tallest), which angle slightly as they rise above this space, framing the views westward towards the DreamCenter and Huangpu Riverfront and creating “sky canyons” that capture the sky by day and emanate light and activity by night. At the base of the tower, the design includes a direct connection to the Shanghai Metro, a shared retail podium, and an elevated pedestrian walkway lined with shops and restaurants that extends eastward to connect the entire development.

Like KPF’s designs for Roppongi Hills in Tokyo, Hudson Yards in New York, and Covent Garden in London, Shanghai DreamCenter will become the great gathering place for the city, bringing together diverse activities, industries, and cultures, and enabling this energy and streetlife to radiate outwards, activating the city.

Construction of the Shanghai DreamCenter will begin this year and is expected to complete in 2017.

 

 

About Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF)
Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates (KPF) is one of the world’s pre-eminent architecture firms, providing architecture, interior, programming and masterplanning services for clients in both the public and private sectors.  Operating as one firm with six global offices, KPF is led by 24 Principals and 27 Directors.  The firm’s 600+ staff members come from 43 different countries, speak more than 30 languages and include over 80 LEED accredited professionals.

KPF’s diverse portfolio, which features over 70 projects certified or pursuing green building certification, comprises corporate, hospitality, residential, academic, civic, transportation and mixed-use projects located in more than 35 countries.  The firm’s recent work includes the Abu Dhabi International Airport, the Shanghai World Financial Center, the International Commerce Centre in Hong Kong, New Songdo City in Korea, the Mandarin Oriental Las Vegas, the RBC Centre and Ritz? Carlton in Toronto, and Heron Tower, Sixty London and Unilever House in London.

Related Stories

| Jan 8, 2015

Microsoft shutters classic clipart gallery: Reaction from a graphic designer

Microsoft shut down its tried-and-true clipart gallery, ridding the world not only of a trope of graphic design, but a nostalgic piece of digital design history, writes HDR's Dylan Coonrad.

| Jan 8, 2015

The future of alternative work spaces: open-access markets, co-working, and in-between spaces

During the past five years, people have begun to actively seek out third places not just to get a day’s work done, but to develop businesses of a new kind and establish themselves as part of a real-time conversation of diverse entrepreneurs, writes Gensler's Shawn Gehle.

Smart Buildings | Jan 7, 2015

NIBS report: Small commercial buildings offer huge energy efficiency retrofit opportunities

The report identifies several barriers to investment in such retrofits, such as the costs and complexity associated with relatively small loan sizes, and issues many small-building owners have in understanding and trusting predicted retrofit outcomes.

| Jan 7, 2015

University of Chicago releases proposed sites for Obama library bid

There are two proposed sites for the plan, both owned by the Chicago Park District in Chicago’s South Side, near the university’s campus in Hyde Park, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

| Jan 7, 2015

4 audacious projects that could transform Houston

Converting the Astrodome to an urban farm and public park is one of the proposals on the table in Houston, according to news site Houston CultureMap.

| Jan 7, 2015

How you can help improve the way building information is shared

PDFs are the de facto format for digital construction documentation. Yet, there is no set standard for how to produce PDFs for a project, writes Skanska's Kyle Hughes.

Smart Buildings | Jan 7, 2015

Best practices for urban infill development: Embrace the region's character, master the pedestrian experience

If an urban building isn’t grounded in the local region’s character, it will end up feeling generic and out-of-place. To do urban infill the right way, it’s essential to slow down and pay proper attention to the context of an urban environment, writes GS&P's Joe Bucher.

| Jan 6, 2015

Construction permits exceeded $2 billion in Minneapolis in 2014

Two major projects—a new stadium for the Minnesota Vikings NFL team and the city’s Downtown East redevelopment—accounted for about half of the total worth of the permits issued. 

| Jan 6, 2015

Snøhetta unveils design proposal of the Barack Obama Presidential Center Library for the University of Hawaii

The plan by Snøhetta and WCIT Architecture features a building that appears square from the outside, but opens at one corner into a rounded courtyard with a pool, Dezeen reports.

| Jan 5, 2015

Another billionaire sports club owner plans to build a football stadium in Los Angeles

Kroenke Group is the latest in a series of high-profile investors that want to bring back pro football to the City of Lights.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Museums

UT Dallas opens Morphosis-designed Crow Museum of Asian Art

In Richardson, Tex., the University of Texas at Dallas has opened a second location for the Crow Museum of Asian Art—the first of multiple buildings that will be part of a 12-acre cultural district. When completed, the arts and performance complex, called the Edith and Peter O’Donnell Jr. Athenaeum, will include two museums, a performance hall and music building, a grand plaza, and a dedicated parking structure on the Richardson campus.



halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021