Placed throughout the park are many of the public buildings for the district, including a school and kindergarten, a sports centre, and data centre, among others.
At the southern end of the park is the most notable building on the campus, a conference centre shaped like a rock at the foot of the hills. Flanking the entrance to Qianhai Bay, this conference centre forms an iconic marker of Tencent’s global influence.
At an intersection of the street grid in the heart of the office zone is the project’s “beating heart”, the information plaza. This spherical space, carved from the corners of four adjacent buildings, displays data related to the everyday functioning of the Tencent campus, from occupancy rates to carbon usage.
Another key “smart city” intervention is the transportation strategy for the campus: along the eastern side of the site, a highway gives access to four underground car parks, but the street grid itself is reserved for autonomous cars and a shuttle bus loop that ensure employees and residents can move around easily.
In addition, metro and bus lines to the city run along both eastern and western edges of the site to connect the Tencent campus to the rest of Shenzhen.
"Our studies and competition entry for Tencent are an attempt to show that the smart city is also the green city. With ubiquitous smart city elements, headlined by a futuristic data hub at the heart of the campus, Tencent employees would feel enveloped by technology.
"But they are also literally surrounded by nature, with the serpentine park always within a short walking distance, and green terraces all around them."
MVRDV founding partner Winy Maas
In their design process for the Tencent Campus, MVRDV conducted a complex research project to arrive at the optimal design for a modern tech campus. The design team developed 28 different outline designs, ordering them into a design “genealogy” that traced multiple evolutionary branches as the team sought to add key qualities to their previous designs.
"All studies were scripted, thus preparing a new way of designing and maintaining future smart cities. The final competition entry was a synthesis of everything learned in this iterative process, resulting in a tech campus that is diverse, flexible, green, dynamic, open, adaptable, and above all, visionary."
MVRDV founding partner Winy Maas
Credit list
Size and programme
2 million m2 City district – Office, Residential, Cultural, Educational
Founding partner in charge
Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs
Design team
Kyo Suk Lee, Marco Gazzola, Shengjie Zhan, Seul Lee, Yayun Liu, Daehee Suk, Dong Min Lee, Cosimo Scotucci, Andrius Ribikauskas, Luca Beltrame, Sen Yang
Sustainability consultancy
Peter Mensinga
Smart Cities and Digital Strategies
Carlo Ratti Associati, Prof. IR. Elphi Nelissen (TU Eindhoven)
Communications strategy
KesselsKramer
Location
Qianhai, Shenzhen, China
Visualisations
Antonio Luca Coco, Francesco Vitale, Pavlos Ventouris, Kirill Emelianov, Costanza Cuccato, Giovanni Coni, Davide Calabro, Tomaso Maschietti
Project coordination
Jammy Zhu
Engineering, transportation, climatic analysis, water management
BuroHappold Engineering
Renewable energy consultancy
Samuel Op den Orth
Story by:
Trendsideas
Photography by:
MVRDV, Atchain, Lights CG
12 Jan, 2020