Kengo Kuma Transforms Shanghai Shipyard Into Multi-Use Complex

In the Lujiazui financial district in Pudong, Shanghai, Kengo Kuma has reimagined a 1972 shipyard into a new 9,000-square-meter multi-use complex, named Shipyard 1862. Behind original, rugged brick walls, the old shipyard was once defined by a 12 by 30-meter grid, which allowed for massive interior spaces to hold ships. In this industrial-style adaptive reuse project, Kuma was careful to preserve the building’s structural and material integrity. These photographs provided by Julien Lanoo show how the industrial shell has been transformed by the refurbishment project.

“Materiality transcends beyond the visual experience, as it requires all five senses of the human body to engage it, to remember it.” Kuma says.

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Cite: Lindsey Leardi. "Kengo Kuma Transforms Shanghai Shipyard Into Multi-Use Complex" 02 Mar 2018. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/889132/kengo-kuma-transforms-shanghai-shipyard-into-multi-use-complex> ISSN 0719-8884

© Julien Lanoo

隈研吾改造上海黄浦江边船厂,砖砌新面貌激活公共空间

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