Star Place

Kaohsiung, China
Photo © Christian Richters
Photo © Christian Richters
Photo © Christian Richters
Photo © Christian Richters
Architects
UNStudio
Location
Star Place, Kaohsiung, China
Year
2008
Client

President Group, Kaohsiung, Taiwan

Data
Building surface: 25.500 m2 + 11.100 m2 for parking levels
Building volume: 135.000 m3 + 38.000 m3 for parking levels
Building site: 28050 m2

Programme
Luxurious shopping plaza
Design of exterior: Façades and lighting, related exterior spaces
Design of Interior: Circulation zones and Public spaces

Credits
UNStudio: Ben van Berkel, Caroline Bos, Astrid Piber with Ger Gijzen, Christian Veddeler, Mirko Bergmann, Albert Gnodde, Sebastian Schott, Freddy Koelemeijer, Katja Groeger, Jirka Bars, Andreas Brink, Simon Kortemeier, Shu Yan Chan

Advisors
Lighting design: UNStudio, ArupLighting, Amsterdam
Façade animation content: UNStudio, Lightlife (Cologne,Germany), Alliance Optotek Corporation (Hsinchu, Taiwan)
Executive Architects: HCF Architects, Planners & Associates, Taipei, Taiwan
Interior Design: Dynasty Design Corp, Taipei, Taiwan
Design Coordination: Mulberry Planning and Design, Taipei, Taiwan
Lighting execution: Alliance Optotek Corporation, Hsinchu, Taiwan

A vibrant new landmark has appeared in the fast and modern city of Kaohsiung: the luxury shopping center Star Place. Both outside and inside, the building radiates dynamism and the kind of bright perfection that the architect refers to as the ‘Made in Heaven Effect’. Everything about the building moves the eye.

Kaohsiung – The city of Kaohsiung is the second largest city on the island of Taiwan and has a population of some 1, 5 million. Its geographical position along the Taiwan Strait has allowed it, over time, to become a maritime hub. After the Second World War, the city grew rapidly, transforming from an undeveloped fishing village into a booming, heavily industrialized port city. Besides its large international container port, the city possesses an expansive export-processing zone, oil and sugar refineries and heavy industries, including shipbuilding and steel.

Today, like other places in this position, Kaohsiung is in the process of re-envisioning the industrial identity that has brought it so far. For a city such as Kaohsiung, which takes a secondary role on the world stage in comparison to global cities such as Hong Kong or Beijing, this question of reassessing your identity can be problematic to address. The kind of urban environment that is produced by rapid industrialization does not provide a platform that is conducive to effortless regeneration. Moreover, the absence of symbolic markers such as those found in leading cultural or administrative cities makes it difficult to identify obvious starting points for the desired regeneration.

What seems to be happening in Kaohsiung is that the city has sought to find a focus for its urban renewal in the residential experience; that is to say, in what the city means in the everyday life of its citizens. In our view, this choice in favor of what we will call a resident-orientated approach to urbanism is highly promising, interesting and sensible. The overall goal is to enhance the attractiveness and the comfort level of the city as a place to live. In order to fulfill the goal of establishing a sustainable urban environment, the planning focus has been directed towards strengthening both the natural aspects of the city and its public infrastructure. The SHE concept (safe, healthy, ecological) is the driver behind the development plans, which include cleaning up the river and creating parks and wetland regions.

Within this context, Star Place fulfills a role in the lively and resident-orientated urban landscape that is more on the urban than on the natural scale of the spectrum. As a shopping center, the project typifies a contemporary public-private form of architectural space. In summary, while the project does not find itself directly within the scope of the nature-enhancing urban regeneration schemes, we still feel that there is a link with the overall improvement goals of Kaohsiung, because thoroughly urban facilities with mass-appeal also form a contributing factor to the livability of a city. Moreover, the project is completely in synch with a resident-orientated approach to urbanism, in which the experience of everyday space by the citizen is the central consideration.

Project history – Before UNStudio was engaged on the project the architectural firm of Dynasty Design Corp and HCF Architects had already made a design for the location, of which the outlines and main structure were preserved. Consequently, the main structure and volume of the current building were predetermined. Within this framework UNStudio made some important alterations. Within the existing structure, the characteristic integration of program and construction that UNStudio strives for, resulting in the typical column-free spaces normally produced by the architects, was not possible. Therefore, in order to achieve the visual and spatial effects of free-flowing unobstructed spaces by other means, a public void was introduced that brings daylight to the floor spaces and establishes visual connections between the different floor levels.

Architectural design UNStudio – Positioned at an urban plaza with a roundabout, the building occupies a triangular lot, giving it a wide and open frontage. Curving inwardly, the building embraces this position and opens itself fully to the city. For UNStudio the question of the building began with the façade as an urban manifestation. However the chosen solution of a ‘deep’ front elevation, with a prominent pattern made by the application of protruding elements, was immediately reconnected to the internal arrangement of the spaces around the atrium, the circulation through the atrium and the views from the inside to the outside. As a result, the project now consists of a tight package of inside-outside relations.

Void – The 12-floor deep void is placed beside the façade, rather than deeper inside the building, in order to facilitate such inside-outside relations. This void forms the main connecting element within the building, with three panorama elevators and two sets of escalators forming the vertical circulation. The void consists of a straight, circular opening which optically appears to slant and twist. This optical effect is generated by the way in which escalators have been positioned inside the atrium space. At each floor level the position of the escalators rotates by ten degrees, resulting in a 110 degree rotation from ground level to the roof.

Surrounding the void, an open circulation space provides direct access to the shops, through doors in the glazed circulation walls. Each floor can house two to seven units, which operate completely independently. Thus, in contrast to a department store, the shop floors can be seen as individual stacked units, with the atrium functioning as a vertical shop window.

The detailing of the circulation space emphasizes the relation of the inside and the outside; interior floor tiles, arranged in the same patterns which are also found on the sidewalk outside the shopping center, reflect the radiating pattern of the façade. The fire shutters, which are positioned around the central space, roll out horizontally from the columns, along rails which are integrated within recessed lighting rings in the ceiling.

Façade – The open and transparent glass façade is patterned with projecting horizontal, aluminum-faced lamellas and vertical glass fins that together form a swirling pattern. This pattern breaks up the scale of the building, which, from the outside has no legible floor heights as a result of the one-meter spacing between the horizontal lamellas. Ostensibly, the pattern of lamellas and fins acts as a sunscreen and weather barrier, but in reality the combination of the wish to make a ‘deep’ façade while preserving the internal floor space was behind the choice to apply a pattern to the outside frontage.

The pattern generates a strong urban effect, but has been modified on the basis of internal, functional demands. The vertical fins are for instance shallower and fewer towards the top of the building, where the restaurant is situated, allowing for higher transparency and better views towards the park opposite the building.

The fins are made of laminated, low-iron glass for extra clarity. A ‘frit’ (dot pattern) has been printed on both sides of the glass, so that the fins appear white by day. Thus they seem to be made of the same material as the horizontal lamellas, resulting in the visual illusion of a unified façade pattern. But from the inside, the glass fins offer uninterrupted views to the outside, as the dots are not apparent from the inside, just like net curtains. The production of the fins, which all have different dimensions, was facilitated by parametric design and production techniques. The façade pattern wraps around the complete building, thus providing the closed rear facade with the same identity, but in a more simplified design.

At night, colored lighting replaces the optical effects produced by the depth embedded in the façade motif, with a fluid layer of changing hues and tones. The dots on the laminated glass fins pick up the colors distributed by LED-lights which are integrated at the bases of the fins. The minimized light fittings contribute to the luxurious appearance of the façade. The night-time appearance of the building is important in Taiwan, which has a tradition of late-night shopping and all-night markets.

Feng shui – The façade pattern was developed using animation software. A series of images was generated, which the client studied with the aid of a feng shui consultant. The final pattern was chosen because it represents a red phoenix.


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