The National Stadium (Bird's
Nest)
Architecture is still a fledgeling industry, whose
recent successes mustn't be allowed to obscure endemic problems of appreciation
and organization. Such were the conclusions of "China Architecture 10 Years
(2000-2010): Architecture & Society," a series of forums (held in Beijing
and Shanghai, with another scheduled in Guangzhou) inviting local architects and
government officials to discuss China's past and future relationship with
architecture.
Rise of the
modern
Throughout history, China has contributed architecure
styles such as the Great Wall, the Forbidden City, the Suzhou gardens and the
Shanghai Shikumen, innovations with typically Chinese characteristics. But where
are the modern styles?
In the past 10 years, a series of events,
including the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games, the 2010 Shanghai World Expo and the
2010
Guangzhou Asian Games, have seen China's cityscapes enjoy worldwide
coverage as a modern showcase of rapidly rising, large concrete buildings.
Nowadays, if Beijing and Shanghai are mentioned, constructions such as
the National Grand Theater, the new China Central Television headquarters, the
National Stadium (the Bird's Nest), or Shanghai World Financial Center (until
now, the highest building in the world) and Jin Mao Tower immediately come to
mind. Their common features are that they are large, tall and modern.
At
the Shanghai forum, Yang Ming, the director of the East China Architectural
Design and Research Institute, declared that the achievements of the past 10
years are so huge that one could effectively ignore any construction done in the
first 20 years of reform and opening-up.
"At present, when you go
outside, 80 percent of the outstanding buildings you can see in China were built
during the last 10 years," Yang observed.
Yang pointed out that since
the National Grand Theater project was designed by French architect Paul Andreu
and began construction in 2001, more and more domestic construction projects in
China have opened their doors to foreign architects and Sino-foreign
cooperations are rapidly emerging here. "It is really a very good opportunity
for the future of Chinese architecture," Yang said.
Big is better
Most of the
architects and experts involved in the forums agreed with the analysis and
thought that the recent success was closely related to events in China during
this time.
According to Hu Yue, director of the Beijing Institute of
Architectural Design and Research, there is a correlation, unique in China, that
when grand events take place, large buildings always appear.
"Throughout
the history of world architecture, large buildings were not always related to
big events," Hu said, "Of course, China has the largest population in the world,
with plenty of reasons for big buildings, but whether it's necessary or worthy
to invest so much human and material resources into them is worthy of
consideration."
Hu wondered, "What on earth is good architecture?" In
his opinion, there seemed to be two criteria in China for judging.
"One
is from the government and is the 'official' one, which usually thinks that
'large' and 'important' symbolic buildings are good …The other is repressing the
public and the media, who seem always to have the opposite view and judgment to
the official criterion," said Hu.
Zhuang Weimin, director of the
Architectural Design and Research Institute of Tsinghua University, expressed
his helplessness as an architect when facing this "offical" dilemma. In order to
meet the deadlines of large events like the Olympic Games and the World Expo, he
said, of design projects always have to be finished within a very short time.
"The years of working experience of the architect cannot be well-matched with
the design and the construction. We are always pitched into designing," he
complained.
"Moreover, once finished, are there any [buildings] that
really have architects' own care and thought inside? I'm not sure."
Duty of an architect
For critic Wang Mingxian in Beijing, the problem was different.
Although he conceded the foreign and Chinese success of the last decade, in
Wang's opinion, "this period has not raised a mature, worldly, influential and
contemporary Chinese architecture team. [Their] force is dispersed and
scattered."
Yu Ting, a Shanghai architect, and Sun Jiwei, head of
Jiading district, had their own views. Yu pointed out that procedures and
approvals beyond the ability of architects have always been needed in China. Yu
thought that, for most of the time, it is enough that an architect carefully
finish the task.
Sun disagreed, stating that architects had a different
duty. "They must learn how to examine their own problems," Sun said. "As long as
the architect really has his own personal pursuits and ideals, the government
will always need and support them.
"Not just something unconventional,"
he further explained. "But [someone who] can really supply good, especially
environmental friendly, designs with limited resources – not very avant-garde or
conceptual – but requiring a large amount of human and financial resources."
As Wang said at the very beginning, the past 10 years may have been
brilliant for Chinese architecture but have also produced the most problems.
These are ones not only architects, but also everyone involved in Chinese
architecture, need to think about and consider deeply.
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