© Iwan Baan / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Iwan Baan / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Shawn Liu / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Naaro / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Sytze Boonstra / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Iwan Baan / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Shawn Liu Studio / Courtesy of Mecanoo
Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Shawn Liu Studio / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Shawn Liu Studio / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Shawn Liu Studio / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Shawn Liu Studio / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Sytze Boonstra / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Iwan Baan / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying) / Courtesy of Mecanoo
Courtesy of Mecanoo
© National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying) / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying) / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Sytze Boonstra / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© National Kaohsiung Center for the Arts (Weiwuying) / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Ethan Lee / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Sytze Boonstra / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Iwan Baan / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Ethan Lee / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Ethan Lee / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Shawn Liu Studio / Courtesy of Mecanoo
© Harry Cock
© Christian Richters
© Kouzi Isita
© Harry Cock
© Harry Cock
© Kouzi Isita
Site Plan
Second Plan
Floor Plan
During the twilight hours as the temperature cools people stroll the streets, shop for their groceries, and eat outside / ©Harry Cock
Under the canopies, as well as under the trees, informal performances occur: people dance, play music, perform plays, or practice Tai Chi / © mecanoo architecten
The form of the banyan trees reflects the local climate. It's wide crown, providing shelter against sun and rain, is a perfect expression of Kaohsiung's humid atmosphere. The open, protective shape of the banyan tree becomes a springboard for the design.
How do you materialise a space the size of a cargo ship, almost 160 metres wide and 225 metres long? We continued our search for the building’s skin and the idea arises to use the finely tuned, locally accessible techniques of Kaohsiung’s building industr
We convince everyone that the Banyan Plaza should have the detailing of a cargo ship, and not of a luxury yacht. We want to employ the ship builders to what they do best: create a durable, long-lasting skin. Ultimately we want the building to look like a

National Kaohsiung Centre for the Arts

200best ES
mecanoo
2018

Type

Museum

Tags

cultural facilities, creative spaces, art spaces , contemporary agoras, 200Best

Visitability

Allowed

Description

Kaohsiung is an informal, lively city of almost three million inhabitants. Not only is it the second largest city in Taiwan and one of the world’s largest sea ports, but also host to a dramatic sub-tropical climate of typhoons, high temperatures, heavy rainfall and regular earthquakes. The new 140,000 square-metre performance complex must cope with all of these extremes.  The location for this building is a former sixty-five hectare military compound in the centre of the metropolitan area of Kaohsiung – a place which is intended to become a sort of ‘Central Park’ for the city. When we first visit the site in 2006 it is still a fenced-off zone of military barracks occupied by a lot of wild, barking dogs. It’s also dense with banyan trees, their twisting trunks and branches having gradually interlocked over decades. Their aerial shoots grow down into the soil forming additional trunks, spreading over an astonishingly wide area, and the crowns of these trunks become one, like a huge umbrella. According to local legend, Alexander the Great once sheltered his entire army beneath the crown of a single tree.The form of the banyan reflects the local climate. Its wide crown, providing shelter against the sun and rain, is a perfect expression of Kaohsiung’s humid atmosphere. In the sub-tropics the sun sets at around six or seven o’clock and, just as it disappears beneath the horizon, the city comes to life. During these twilight hours as the temperature cools people stroll the streets, shop for their groceries, and eat outside. Under the canopies, as well as under the trees, informal performances occur: people dance, play music, perform plays, or practice Tai Chi. What we see, hear, feel, taste and smell on this first trip to Taiwan inspires us to somehow harness this unique urban atmosphere.We wonder whether the banyan tree could help us to create a combination of formal and informal performance spaces. In this way the building would be full of life around the clock; a natural continuation of the park. We know that good public buildings need good public space, a mantra which is central to our approach to civic architecture: think of the Library of Birmingham’s sunken amphitheatre, or La Llotja de Lleida’s urban stage beneath a cantilever, using the stairs of an adjacent building as audience seating. The formal qualities of these three buildings are very different but they have one thing in common: they are a perfect match with their respective locations, cultures and climates.The open, protective shape of the banyan tree becomes a springboard for the design. Its expansive sheltered crown becomes the Banyan Plaza, a partially enclosed public space where the cooling wind can freely flow. Between the four formal performance halls, which form the ‘trunks’ that support the undulating roof, a topography rising from ground level to plus five metres becomes part of the park’s landscape. Where the roof touches the earth the building becomes an amphitheatre, open towards the surrounding parkland which, in turn, becomes both its stage and its set.(Description provided by Mecanoo)