Skyline Gazing: The Most Iconic Modern Buildings of Beijing
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Though a trip through Beijing has plenty of historical architecture to offer, the city’s skyline also holds many feats of modern design. However, unlike Shanghai, where most of the great structures are gathered around the Pudong bend to be viewed all at once, Beijing has spread out its contemporary landmarks throughout the city, making it difficult for architectural enthusiasts to sneak a gander at all of them. We therefore decided to gather them all into one place. Here is our list of Beijing’s most iconic modern buildings:
The “Big Pants,” as it is more commonly known, is one of just ten buildings in the city over 200m tall. Designed by Rem Koolhaas and Ole Schreeren, the towering loop of two leaning towers connected at the top and bottom by horizontal off-shots is now such an iconic structure that it is often used in film and television to establish that the story is set in Beijing.
CITIC Tower
Is it a smushed doughnut? A double helix? Perhaps a sort of Mobius strip? Lying at the southwest corner of Chaoyang Park, the Phoenix Center is an award-winning building that leaves much up to the interpretation of the on-looker. It was built to house Hong Kong broadcaster Phoenix TV, and occasionally opens to the public for exhibitions that show off the work of artists in addition to the stunning view from the inside.
Pangu Plaza
An unmissable structure when traveling through north Beijing, Pangu Plaza is building with a wavy head and a winding history (and that's putting it lightly). Its bizarre topper is meant to look like a dragon head (if you squint just right) that leads the body made up of four much shorter towers. As the logo on the side suggests, it is also housed IBM’s China headquarters.
National Library North Area
The original National Library building, though it was built in 1987, would not look out of place in the China of old. Just after the Olympics, however, a sleek new building was added to the library campus. Appropriately, it somewhat resembles a giant silver book, or less appropriately, a ship from Star Trek, especially when the front windows are lit up at night (though you’ll have to venture to Fujian province to see a real USS Enterprise shaped-building). As it is a public facility, you can even go see the inside of the building, and foreigners can obtain a reader card using their passport.
It’s not hard to see how this theater earned the nickname of the "Giant Egg.” With an opera hall, music hall, several art exhibition halls, and restaurants, the National Centre for Performing Arts is also the largest theater building in Asia. Besides the shape, its most distinctive feature is that its exterior transitions from glass to titanium and the surrounding reflection pool.
People’s Daily Headquarters
Not far from the Big Pants, the People’s Daily Headquarters caught a lot of flack in the design world while it was under construction due to its rather phallic appearance. Upon completion, though, it was able to shed the laughter and hold the city in awe with its shiny new façade that makes it look more like a wind sail. The original design included a helipad and planned for large satellite dishes to be placed within its hollow tip, but we like it just the way it turned out.
China World Tower
In contrast with the vase-like CITIC Tower, this the second tallest building in Beijing has a chubby waist and thins out at both ends. Its crowning feature is, of course, its crown, which catches the eye when gazing across the skyline. Atop sits Atmosphere Bar, which may just have the best view of the city of any bar in town.
Better known by its nickname the "Bird’s Nest,” the National Stadium is recognizably by its steel beams that intersect and criss-cross like a bamboo forest. The stadium, which seats 91,000 spectators, was built for the 2008 Summer Olympics. Since then it has been used for major football games and other sporting events. It is also scheduled to be used for the opening and closing ceremonies of the 2022 Winter Olympics and Paralympics.
National Aquatics Center
Another famous Olympic facility with a catchy nickname, the “Water Cube” is defined by its bubbly façade and was used for the Olympic swimming competitions and afterward was opened to the public as an indoor water park. In preparation for the 2022 Winter Olympics, it has undergone a transformation into an “Ice Cube” and will host the Olympic curling events.
This giant data center, too, was erected to serve the needs of the 2008 Olympics and sits adjacent to Pangu Plaza and the National Stadium. From the west-side view, fittingly, the Digital Beijing Building's horizontal and diagonal lines evoke the circuits of a computer chip. From the south, one can see that the building is actually four separate sections, unequally divided and spaced.
Olympic Tower
Overlooking Olympic Park, the Olympic Tower is made up of four connected towers that bloom into circular observation decks at the tops. The tower was built to commemorate the 2008 games coming to Beijing, and its only functional purpose is to get a nice view of the city.
Wangjing Soho
Wangjing Soho was designed by architect Zaha Hadid and features three separate shark fin-like buildings of varying heights and widths. At 200 meters, the tallest tower is notable is the world's fifth tallest building designed by a woman.
This massive Soho is another work of the late Hadid, and similarity can be seen in the vertical lines around the curvilinear buildings. Between its four towers lies a courtyard that had been known to host more than a few of our festivals.
Leeza Soho
Zaha Hadid's final impression on Beijing, the Leeza Soho (丽泽) in Fengtai was completed at the end of 2019, and is a continuation of her fascination with curvilinear elements and design. At nearly 200-meters-tall, the atrium is the biggest in the world and is cleverly designed so that its 45-degree angle allows sunlight into all of its 46 floors, which mostly hold office space.
Built in 2000, Dongsishitiao's imposing Poly Theatre and sprawling bronze mural is likely one of the first buildings to catch the attention of visitors. The 1,400-seat theater houses plays, music, and opera throughout the year.
Designed by the late Guangzhou-born architect I.M. Pei, who died last year at the age of 102, the Bank of China Headquarters in Xicheng. Completed in 1982, the bank marked Pei's first China-based project, 40 years after his initial departure, and eschews a skyscraper-type design for something more subdued so that it would now overshadow important low-lying structures in the heart of the Chinese capital such as the Forbidden City. Pei also leaves behind the Fragrant Hill Hotel in the northwest of the city.
READ: Beijing's Five Architectural Colors, and the Symbolism Behind Them
Images: Quan Chen (via Flickr), Wikimedia, WongTung, Achitizer, Dingman, Archspace, Yahoo News, Arch Daily, Opera World, Pinterest, China Daily, Trip Advisor, 163.com, qq.com, tkhunt
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