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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Leeza SOHO in Beijing, China by Zaha Hadid Architects

 
December 2nd, 2019 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Zaha Hadid Architects

Located on Lize Road in southwest Beijing, the Leeza SOHO tower anchors the new Fengtai business district – a growing financial and transport hub between the city centre and the recently opened Beijing Daxing International Airport to the south. The new business district is integral to Beijing’s multi-modal urban plan to accommodate growth without impacting existing infrastructure networks in the centre of the city.

This 45-storey 172,800m² tower responds to demand from small and medium-sized businesses for flexible and efficient Grade A office space Adjacent to the business district’s rail station at the intersection of five new lines currently under construction on Beijing’s Subway network, Leeza SOHO’s site is diagonally dissected by an underground subway service tunnel.

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

  • Architects: Zaha Hadid Architects
  • Project: Leeza SOHO
  • Location: Beijing, China
  • Photography: Hufton+Crow
  • Client: SOHO China Limited
  • Design: Zaha Hadid, Patrik Schumacher
  • ZHA Project Director: Satoshi Ohashi
  • ZHA Project Architect: Philipp Ostermaier
  • ZHA Project Associates: Kaloyan Erevinov, Ed Gaskin, Armando Solano
  • ZHA Project Team: Yang Jingwen, Di Ding, Xuexin Duan, Samson Lee, Shu Hashimoto, Christoph Klemmt, Juan Liu, Dennis Brezina, Rita Lee, Seungho Yeo, Yuan Feng, Zheng Xu, Felix Amiss, Lida Zhang, Qi Cao

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

  • ZHA Competition Directors: Satoshi Ohashi, Manuela Gatto
  • ZHA Competition Team Lead Designers: Philipp Ostermaier, Dennis Brezina, Claudia Glas Dorner
  • ZHA Competition Team: Yang Jingwen, Igor Pantic, Mu Ren, Konstantinos Mouratidis, Nicholette Chan, Yung-Chieh Huang
  • Executive Architect: Beijing Institute of Architectural Design
  • Consultants
  • Structure: Bollinger + Grohmann (Stage 0,1); China Academy of Building Research (Stage 2); Beijing Institute of Architectural Design (Stage 3,4)
  • Facade: Konstruct West Partners (Stage 2); Kighton Facade (Stage 3,4); Yuanda (Stage 3,4)
  • MEP: Parsons Brinkerhoff (Stage 2); Beijing Institute of Architectural Design (Stage 3,4)
  • Lighting: J+B Studios Architectural Design (Stage 2); Light Design (Stage 2,3); Leuchte (Stage 4)
  • Landscape: Zaha Hadid Architects (Stage 2,3); Ecoland (Stage 4)
  • Interiors: Zaha Hadid Architects (Stage 2,3); HuaTeng (China) (Stage 4)
  • Signage: Dongdao (Stage 4,5)
  • LEED: Schneider Electric (Stage 2)
  • Helipad: Zhi Jiu (Stage 3,4)
  • Traffic Consultant: Dazhengtong (Stage 3,4)
  • Quantity Surveyor: Liby Limited (Stage 2

    Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

  • Site Supervision: Shuangyuan (Stage 5)
  • Modelmaker: Gaojie (Stage 2,3)
  • Visualisation: MIR (Stage 3,4), Cosmoscube (Stage 3,4), Frontop (Stage 2), Gozen (Stage 2), Zero (Stage 2), Atchain (Stage 4)
  • Site area: 14.365 sqm
  • Gross floor Area:

    • 124.000 sqm overground
    • 48.800 sqm underground
  • Number of floors:

    • 4 floors below ground, B1 to B4
    • 45 floors above ground, including 3 MEP floors on F13, 24, 35
  • Number of parking spaces: 480
  • Number of bicycle spaces: 2680
  • Sustainability: LEED pre Gold award in May 2019
  • Project Start Date: October 2013
  • Siteworks Start Date: April 2015
  • Completion Date: 19 November 2019

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Straddling this tunnel, the tower’s design divides its volume into two halves enclosed by a single facade shell. The emerging space between these two halves extends the full height of the tower, creating the world’s tallest atrium at 194.15m which rotates through the building as the tower rises to realign the upper floors with Lize road to the north.

This rotation of the atrium intertwines Leeza SOHO’s two halves in a dynamic ‘pas de deux’ with connecting skybridges on levels 13, 24, 35 and 45; its glazed facade giving panoramic views across the city.

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Leeza SOHO’s atrium acts as a public square for the new business district, linking all spaces within the tower and providing varying views due to its twisting, sculptural form; creating a fantastic new civic space for Beijing that is directly connected to the city’s transport network.

The atrium brings natural light deep within the building, acting as a thermal chimney with an integrated ventilation system that maintains positive pressure at low level to limit air ingress and provides an effective clean air filtration process within the tower’s internal environment.

Leeza SOHO’s double-insulated, unitised glass curtain wall system steps the glazing units on each floor at an angle, providing narrow ventilating registers to draw outside air through operable cavities where required; creating extremely efficient environmental control for each floor.

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

The two halves of the tower shade the atrium’s public spaces, while the double-insulated low-e glazing maintains a comfortable indoor environment in Beijing’s extreme weather conditions. With a u-value of 2.0 W/m²K, the glazing has a shading coefficient of 0.4. The tower’s overall external envelope u-value is 0.55 W/m²K.

At the forefront of 3D Building Information Modelling (BIM) in design, construction management and building operations, Zaha Hadid Architects and SOHO China have implemented proven technologies to reduce the energy consumption and emissions at each of their four collaborations, totalling 15 million square feet (1.4 million sq. m) of mixed-use urban space in Beijing and Shanghai.

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Designed to achieve LEED Gold certification by the US Green Building Council, Leeza SOHO’s advanced 3D BIM energy management system monitors real-time environmental control and energy efficiency. These systems also include heat recovery from exhaust air and high-efficiency pumps, fans, chillers boilers, lighting and controls. The tower incorporates water-collection, low-flow rate fixtures and grey water flushing as well as an insulating green roof with photovoltaic array to harvest solar energy.

2,680 bicycle parking spaces, with lockers, shower facilities and dedicated charging spaces for electric and hybrid cars are located below ground; while low volatile organic compound materials are installed throughout Leeza SOHO to minimise interior pollutants and high efficiency filters remove particulates via the air-handling system.

Image Courtesy © Hufton+Crow

Image Courtesy © MIR

Image Courtesy © MIR

Image Courtesy © MIR

Image Courtesy © MIR

Image Courtesy © MIR

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

Image Courtesy © Zaha Hadid Architects

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Categories: Business Centre, Financial Center, Mixed use, Offices, Parking, Residential, Retail, Tower, Transport Center




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