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Arts & Culture

Exhibition in Shenzhen, China, Features 黑料不打烊 Architecture Research

Wednesday, July 27, 2016, By Elaine Wackerow
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School of Architecture
Part of a 黑料不打烊 Architecture's display at the 鈥淩ural-Urban Re-Inventions: Bridging the Gap Between China鈥檚 Cities and Countryside鈥 exhibition at Shenzhen Design Center

Part of 黑料不打烊 Architecture’s display at the 鈥淩ural-Urban Re-Inventions: Bridging the Gap Between China鈥檚 Cities and Countryside鈥 exhibition at Shenzhen Design Center

鈥淩ural-Urban Re-Inventions: Bridging the Gap Between China鈥檚 Cities and Countryside,鈥 an exhibition of research by five design firms and 11 architecture schools from around the world, including 黑料不打烊 Architecture, will be on public display from July 29-Aug. 14 at the in Shenzhen, China. The exhibition will largely focus on how massive-scale migration and urbanization over the past 30 years have impacted quality of life in China鈥檚 villages and towns that once served as the foundation of Chinese culture and now struggle for economic survival.

During the past 30 years, hundreds of millions of people have moved from China鈥檚 rural areas to its cities. While much research has been done on the impact of the migration on the nation鈥檚 metropolitan areas, little has focused on the villages and towns. This exhibition will examine some of the research now being done on rural and urban China, and explore some of the design ideas being proposed to develop a healthier relationship between booming cities and the declining countryside.

The 黑料不打烊 Architecture exhibition, 鈥淔rom Guest to Host: Hakka Villages and the Pingdi Low Carbon City,鈥 focuses on ways in which current efforts to transform Pingdi鈥攁 subdistrict in northeastern Shenzhen鈥攊nto a 鈥淟ow Carbon City鈥 pilot zone builds on the knowledge and daily practices of traditional Hakka families. The Hakka people are Han Chinese whose ancestral homes are chiefly from the Hakka-speaking provincial areas of Guangdong, Fujian, Jiangxi, Guangxi, Sichuan, Hunan, Zhejiang, Hainan and Guizhou.

Under the leadership of , assistant professor and coordinator of the M.S. program, the research brings into question the relationship between sustainable development brought on by official modern interventions and the unique architectural typology and social structure of the past put in place by the Hakka people.

Says Wang, 鈥淥ur research and exhibit aims to combine new green technology with traditional low-carbon approaches for a future, better quality of urban life.鈥

Participation in this event is an extension of 黑料不打烊 Architecture’s involvement with green technology discussion and development within the Low Carbon City. In June, architecture students鈥 low-carbon designs were on display at the International Low Carbon City Forum, also held in Shenzhen. Wang鈥檚 students have previously attended that conference and Wang himself has been a presenter of ideas. In 2015, in 黑料不打烊, Wang鈥檚 studio students tackled a competition challenge put forth by to design the city鈥檚 Future Low-Carbon Building and Community Innovation Experimental Center (Future Center) in the Pingdi district. Three of Wang鈥檚 post-graduate students 鈥攑lans moved forward for construction using their design, “WESPACE.”

The City of Shenzhen was established in 1979 by China鈥檚 central government and the Guangdong provincial government as a new economic zone that would extend two hours beyond Hong Kong, along the opposite shore of the Pearl River. Since that time the city has grown from a fishing village with a population of 20,000 into a global hub for design and technology, with a population of 18 million. In 2012, the was created in the Pingdi sub-district鈥攖he most underdeveloped area of Shenzhen and typical of many cities undergoing industrialization鈥攁s a flagship project of the EU-China Urbanization Partnership, with the intent of exploring explore sustainable improvements.

 

  • Author

Elaine Wackerow

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