flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

New HQ for Chinese tech supplier will feature gardens on every floor

Office Buildings

New HQ for Chinese tech supplier will feature gardens on every floor

NBBJ’s spiral design maximizes worker exposure to the green spaces.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | June 25, 2020

The design for vivo's new headquarters in China calls for indoor-outdoor gardens on each of its 32 floors. Images: NBBJ

Construction began last month on the new corporate headquarters for vivo, a fast-growing China-based tech and smartphone provider. The building is scheduled to be substantially completed in the fall of 2025, when it will include as part of its amenities package indoor-outdoor gardens on every one of its levels.

The 32-story, 97,000-sm tower, which will soar 150 meters in the Bao’an district of Shenzhen, China, will feature gardens that ascend, in a spiral design, alongside a health- and wellness-focused work environment.

“We know that today’s workers thrive in ‘whole life’ environments that integrate nature, health and work. Our design is the physical embodiment of that ethos—fluid, sustainable, and center[ed] around the wellbeing of those who use the space,” says Robert Mankin, Partner in charge of workplace design at NBBJ, the design architect on this project.

GARDENS WILL EVOKE CHINA’S BIO-DIVERSITY

The building, scheduled for completion in 2025, will rise 150 meters.

 

Along with NBBJ, the Building Team includes Atkins (sustainability consultant), InHabit (façade consultant) BPI (lighting consultant), CADG (landscape), and WSP (vertical transportation). The local AE team is overseen by Tongji Architectural Design, whose scope includes construction drawings, as well as structural and MEP engineering.

The building’s green spaces move from a ground-level plaza with retail through the tower, where they transition to evoke the diverse biomes found in Southeast China, from coastal wetlands and lowland forests to subtropical and alpine forests.

Also see: A Poland firm takes vegetative façade to a new level

The building is designed to achieve WELL and LEED Gold certifications. To protect against rising flood waters due to climate change and typhoons, NBBJ has proposed sustainability features that include permeable surfaces and landscaping for drainage back into the ground.

Rainwater will be captured in underground tanks and reused.

WORKPLACE ZONES GET FULL EFFECT OF GARDENS

The gardens on the first four above-ground floors will be connected, and lead to a collection of gardens and terraces on the middle floors.

 

Since the outdoor gardens spiral up and change location on each level, “we developed a smart and systematic planning strategy to zone the workspaces so they get the most of the gardens,” explains Vivian Ngo, a Principal and one of NBBJ’s architects on this project, in written responses to BD+C’s questions.

So pantries will always be adjacent to the gardens as a starting point, with workspaces shifting around on each level. Ngo notes that, in a typical office plan, the core is usually the starting point.

To minimize columns, some of the outdoor garden spans are quite large, says Ngo. The structural engineering ensures that the garden zone has enough capacity for planting soil and enough clearance in the floor below without additional columns.

Furthermore, in typhoon-prone Shenzhen, the outdoor elements in these high-rise gardens, such as plant species and exterior doors, will need to withstand storms.

CLIENT LOOKS BEYOND CONSTRUCTION COST

A welcoming street-level plaza will include retail.

 

Ngo says that the design team considered whether to connect the gardens throughout the entire building, so that occupants could walk from level 5 (the first floor above parking) to level 32 uninterrupted. The team ultimately decided, for efficiency sake, to connect the first four floors with gardens on the same side, as one unit.

The building will coil upward to The Atrium—a collection of terraces and gardens at the building’s middle levels—before finishing at the penthouse area that offers event space, conference rooms, and a view of Qianhai Bay.

Ngo says that while the building was designed before the coronavirus was declared a pandemic last March, its connecting stairs “could help decrease elevator use when traveling short distances between levels.”

The area of covered outdoor space counts toward the building’s gross floor area, or GFA, according to local codes. That’s an added cost, explains Ngo, and somewhat contrary to traditional real estate development economics. “However, the client was very open-minded,” she says, in its support of the outdoor garden design and its promise of unique wellness and productivity benefits “to create value beyond what can be measured in dollars or yuans.”

Related Stories

Office Buildings | Feb 15, 2019

A healthier perspective: Office developers bet on wellness amenities to attract top-notch tenants

Owners and developers are driving demand for wellness features and practices—active stairways, biophilia, enhanced air quality, etc.—as one more way draw tenants. 

Office Buildings | Feb 15, 2019

Vancouver’s new office building will be a stack of reflective boxes

OSO and Merrick Architecture designed the building.

Office Buildings | Feb 11, 2019

Real-world wellness pays off

3form, a materials manufacturer, did a top-to-bottom remodel of its Salt Lake City headquarters campus that included adding a 14,500-sf gym.

Office Buildings | Feb 5, 2019

Duluth Trading Company moves to new HQ building

Plunkett Raysich Architects designed the project.

Office Buildings | Jan 11, 2019

Open offices are bad!

The Harvard studies on the unintended effects of open office defines it as space where 'one entire floor was open, transparent and boundaryless… [with] assigned seats,' and the other had 'similarly assigned seats in an open office design, with large rooms of desks and monitors and no dividers between people's desks.'

Office Buildings | Dec 18, 2018

Google announces new $1B Hudson Square campus project

The 1.7 million-sf campus will expand the company’s New York City presence.

Office Buildings | Dec 13, 2018

Apple selects Austin for $1 billion campus

The company will also build smaller expansions in six other U.S. cities over the next three years.

Office Buildings | Dec 4, 2018

Brookfield launches contest for startups to receive two years of free office space

This is part of a larger campaign to burnish the image of L.A.’s Wells Fargo Center. 

Office Buildings | Nov 28, 2018

Amazon HQ2 and the new geography of work

The big HQ2 takeaway is how geography and mobility are becoming major workplace drivers.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category

Office Buildings

Unlocking Sustainability: Smart Access in the Coworking Space

Smart building technologies, including modern access control systems, are transforming coworking spaces by advancing sustainability initiatives and offering new ways to create and operate efficient working spaces. Learn more about the benefits of eco-friendly practices, from reducing carbon emissions to cutting operating costs, and discover 
how choosing the right partners can amplify your green efforts.


Adaptive Reuse

Detroit’s Michigan Central Station, centerpiece of innovation hub, opens

The recently opened Michigan Central Station in Detroit is the centerpiece of a 30-acre technology and cultural hub that will include development of urban transportation solutions. The six-year adaptive reuse project of the 640,000 sf historic station, created by the same architect as New York’s Grand Central Station, is the latest sign of a reinvigorating Detroit.



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