flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

First look: Nadel's $1.5 billion Dalian, China, Sports Center

First look: Nadel's $1.5 billion Dalian, China, Sports Center

Massive project includes soccer stadium, indoor arena, tennis stadium, natatorium, baseball stadium, hotel, and training and research support facility.


By Nadel Architects | May 13, 2014
The $1.5 billion project is the initial seed of urban development in the area. I
The $1.5 billion project is the initial seed of urban development in the area. In addition to five major sports venues, the comp

Nadel Architects designed the new, world-class Dalian Sports Center, a massive 203-acre sports and entertainment complex located at 699 Lan Ling Rd., Ganjingzi District, Dalian, China on the Liaodong Peninsula adjacent to Korea.

The $1.5 billion project is the initial seed of urban development in the area. In addition to five major sports venues, the complex includes a 30-story, 440-room, 5-star Kempinski full-service hotel and conference center and a 40,500-square-meter athletes’ training facility and office building for coaches.

The sports complex, which hosted the China National Games upon completion of construction in September 2013, is designed to meet Olympic standards. The center is one of the only sports facilities in the world where all venues of this scale are incorporated on one site.

Venues include a 61,000-seat soccer stadium, an 18,000-seat indoor arena managed by AEG, a 9,600-seat tennis stadium, a 5,000-seat natatorium, a 3,000-seat baseball stadium, a comprehensive training and sports research facility as well as living quarters to accommodate athletes.

 


All photos: courtesy Nadel Architects

 

The city of Dalian prides itself as a “city of sports” with a specific reputation for being the “home of track and field,” “home of swimmers,” and the “city of soccer” in China. 

Designed to accommodate numerous music concerts, sporting events, cultural and family events year-round, the new facility will not only serve as a regional sports center–propelling Dalian's world famous athletes to the forefront of training and international competition–but will also serve as an international tourist destination, entertainment venue and spiritually meaningful place to exercise, meditate and enjoy nature.

“In my 50-year career, this is the most remarkable project in which I’ve ever been involved,” said Herb Nadel, FAIA, founding principal of Nadel Architects. “I am terribly proud and excited to witness our team’s innovative design become a reality. Seeing this incredible center completed and built to world-class design standards is a true honor.”

Reinforcing the cohesiveness of the city's masterplan, the team, directed by Michael Hwa, planned the new year-round sports complex to connect residential neighborhoods with entertainment, retail and office space. The Dalian Sports Center creates a link through the heart of the city's newest development zone, becoming an anchor for the community and catapulting the city into a modern and connected city of the future.

 

 

Conceived as a “sports artery,” Dalian Sports Center incorporates an “S” shaped pathway as the main link between facilities during competition events. The pathway acts as a gently curving spine, crossing the site and connecting all the major venues like tendons connecting the muscles of the athletes. 

Creatively blending landscape and the human form, the design effectively connects each of the sporting venues not only to each other, but also to the city's transportation infrastructure and to the community as a whole.

“The genesis behind the dynamic design of the facility was to capture the awe-inspiring speed, graceful lines and kinetic movements of competing athletes,” said Nadel. “Our design has connected the movement of the buildings with the muscles of the athletes – long graceful curves and lines – all providing a visual flow that captivates each person as they move through the complex.”

The main entrance to the sports center is a large, welcoming urban plaza that can accommodate up to 150,000 people. The cleverly landscaped plaza provides an immersive experience to the visitor through a necklace of intimately scaled spaces for relaxing, reading, meditation, tai chi, walking and enjoying music among seasonally changing gardens.

 

 

To conserve and reclaim water, these gardens have been ecologically engineered and terraced like traditional rice fields, flourishing year round with a variety of native plants and flowers.

The largest structure within the complex is the elliptical-shaped, 61,000-seat outdoor stadium, designed to accommodate soccer matches and other international sports competitions. Ethylene Tetrafluoroethylene (ETFE)–a transparent polymer popularized by Beijing’s Water Cube in the 2008 Summer Olympics–was used for the “skin” of the outdoor stadium due to its versatility.

The sophisticated material is lighter weight, transmits more light, insulates better and has a lower installation cost than glass or plastic. The stadium’s ETFE cushions, which are shades of white, grey and blue during the day, are illuminated with LED lights at night, displaying custom color patterns to represent the competing teams or to symbolize a particular event.

During winter, Dalian faces challenging weather and snow, requiring great ingenuity on the part of Nadel’s project team in the stadium’s design and materials used. To tackle this challenge, Nadel used Building Information Modeling (BIM) software to innovatively design, research and test the stadium exterior’s steel frame with a custom drainage system covered with a membrane of 2,745 ETFE cushions.

 

 

Adjacent to the outdoor stadium along the “S” pathway is the 18,000 seat indoor arena whose exterior features supple arching lines, representing an athlete’s muscles wrapping around a strong core.  Managed by AEG, the indoor arena is used for an array of entertainment and sporting events including basketball, volleyball, table tennis, badminton, fencing, gymnastics, weight lifting, wrestling and martial arts, as well as a variety of music concerts.

The design of the natatorium was inspired by the waves of the sea. The natatorium boasts 5,000 spectator seats; a 10-lane, 50 meter pool for swimming, synchronized swimming and water polo competitions; a diving pool with 0.6, 2.6, 5.0, 7.5 and 10 meter diving platforms; an 8-lane, 50 meter warm up pool; and men’s and women’s locker rooms.

The 9,600-seat tennis stadium was designed to be both large and intimate, with every seat close to the action providing an unobstructed view of each event. The "seating bowl" of the arena sits within a live landscaped trellis structure, which embraces the spectators in field of green and light mirroring traditional European tennis venues and complementing the year-round landscaping of the “S” shaped pathway.

 

 

Nadel’s design team worked on a fast track schedule to complete the sports center in time for the 2013 China National Games. Nadel’s unique approach to the design and construction process allowed the entire project team to work together and develop an efficient timetable. The result is a facility that was completed under a tight deadline, without sacrificing the integrity of the design.

“This new facility is truly the architectural heart of the district, setting a benchmark for future developments that will serve the community,” said Nadel.

Joining Nadel on the project was Andrew Wolff, AIA, LEED® AP, senior designer; John Yang, project manager; and Michael Hwa, project director as well as a large team of designers and production staff.

Project Specifications
The 203-acre sports and entertainment complex features several areas for events and activities, including:

  • 61,000-seat soccer stadium
  • 18,000-seat indoor arena
  • 9,600-seat tennis stadium
  • 5,000-seat natatorium
  • 3,000-seat baseball stadium­
  • 30-story, 440 room, 5-star Kempinski Hotel and media center
  • 40,500-squ­­­­are-meter training and support research facility with 4 levels of athletic training space  and 6 levels of office space for coaches 

 

About Nadel Architects
For the past 40 years, Nadel Architects has provided comprehensive services ranging from architectural design, master planning and feasibility studies to complete interior design, planning and programming. Nadel is ranked among the largest architectural firms in the world (#60 per Building Design+Construction, Giant 300 list, 2012).

The company has completed more than 80,000 residential units, 30 million square feet of retail space, 600 office buildings, numerous hotels and resorts, and a variety of public and educational institutions, which have received more than 75 awards for design excellence. Headquartered in Los Angeles, the firm has designed a variety of projects located around the globe. For more information, please visit www.nadelarc.com. 

Related Stories

| Oct 7, 2014

Economic gains are rallying rents in Raleigh, N.C.

The greater Raleigh, N.C., market appears to be getting back on its feet again, which is good news for rental property owners.

| Oct 7, 2014

Structured, not stirred: The architecture of cocktails [infographic]

In this downloadable graphic, technologist Shaan Hurley dissects 37 cocktails and analyzes their architectural makeup. 

| Oct 6, 2014

Moshe Safdie: Skyscrapers lead to erosion of urban connectivity

The 76-year-old architect sees skyscrapers and the privatization of public space to be the most problematic parts of modern city design. 

| Oct 6, 2014

Houston's office construction is soaring

Houston has 19 million square feet of office space under construction, 54% more than a year ago, and its highest level since the booming 1980s, according to local news reports.

| Oct 6, 2014

Design activity at architecture firms finally back to pre-recession levels: AIA report

Gross billings at architecture firms have increased by 20% since 2011, according to a new report by the AIA.

| Oct 6, 2014

Retelling an old story: Why women are underrepresented in architecture

Women account for more than half of the U.S. population. But even with significant gains over the past 25 years, their numbers and positions among the ranks of practicing architects appear to have stalled.

| Oct 3, 2014

New survey tracks Americans’ attitudes towards transit use

A record 10.7 billion rides were taken on public transit in the United States last year. And a national survey of Americans finds that the speed, reliability, and cost, more than any other factors, determine people’s willingness and frequency of use.

| Oct 2, 2014

Effective use of building enclosure mock-ups within the commissioning process

Engineers from SSR offer advice and guidelines on implementing building enclosure mockups on any project.

| Oct 2, 2014

Budget busters: Report details 24 of the world's most obscenely over-budget construction projects

Montreal's Olympic Stadium and the Sydney Opera House are among the landmark projects to bust their budgets, according to a new interactive graph by Podio. 

| Oct 1, 2014

Long-time competitors NAC|Architecture and Osborn merge

The combined firm has offices in California, Colorado, and Washington, and offers a wide range of services, from landscape architecture and graphic design to architecture and interior design.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




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