Compiled by Team IAnD
Renderings: Courtesy Foster+Partners
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Foster+Partners’
have been granted approval to develop the urban plan for the Yuexiu
International Financial City in Wuhan…
Wuhan, one of the origins of China's modern industry, is
China's traditional base of the manufacturing industry and like the other rapidly developing places in the country, sees
a lot of urbanization and new modern architecture taking the city from
strength-to-strength.
Foster + Partners’
masterplan for a large, historically important site in the centre of Wuhan has
been granted planning permission. Rooted in analysis of Wuhan’s history and
unique urban form, Yuexiu International Financial City will establish a new
district, which is open and seamlessly integrated with the surrounding streets,
and can regenerate the city’s once vibrant heart.
Located close to
Jingwu Road, once famous for its street vendors, the master plan reflects the
diverse activities that formerly came together on the site. The design team
studied the area’s history, the scale and form of its buildings, streets and
public spaces, and mapped the different communities around Wuhan. The
147,000-sq. m. scheme includes a series of office and residential towers,
as well as a hotel and impressive new public spaces, animated by a variety of
shops, cafes and restaurants at ground level. The aim is to create a walk-able,
highly permeable new part of the city – the volume of traffic has been reduced
and the majority of vehicles have been relocated
below ground to create a network of pedestrian streets, with road widths kept
to a minimum.
In the words of Luke
Fox, Senior Executive Partner & Studio Head: “Our aim has been to create a new urban model for Wuhan – a unique and
exciting new destination, with a sustainable mixture of commercial and
residential uses, but which feels familiar and of its place. Rather than create
an enclosed ‘city within a city’, we have stitched this new quarter into the
surrounding streets. It will have a distinctive new identity, but one that is
inspired by local architecture, history and culture.”
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