from the cut-and-paste dept
Although
China is often glibly dismissed as little more than an imitator of
others, yet another story about copying paradoxically shows it leading
the way. That's because
what's being cloned is an entire building complex that's still under construction:
The project being pirated is the Wangjing
SOHO, a complex of three towers that resemble curved sails, sculpted in
stone and etched with wave-like aluminum bands, that appear to swim
across the surface of the Earth when viewed from the air.
Zhang Xin, the billionaire property developer who heads SOHO China and
commissioned [the famous architect Zaha] Hadid to design the complex,
lashed out against the pirates during the Galaxy opening: "Even as we
build one of Zaha's projects, it is being replicated in Chongqing," a
megacity near the eastern edge of the Tibetan plateau. At this point in
time, she added, the pirates of Chongqing are building faster than SOHO.
The original is set for completion in 2014.
As the article in Der Spiegel quoted above notes, this isn't the first
time that buildings have been copied by Chinese architects:
Last year, citizens of the Austrian hillside hamlet of
Hallstatt were shocked when they inadvertently discovered Chinese
architects had surreptitiously and extensively photographed their homes
and were building a doppelgänger version of the UNESCO World Heritage
site in southern China.
But here, as with the latest case, it's hard to see what the problem is.
Nobody is mistaking these pirated versions for the originals: the use
of photographs in the case of Hallstatt, and "digital files or
renderings" in the case of the Wangjing SOHO, means that the results
will only be approximate copies, lacking many key details that make the
originals artistically notable. If anything, their existence will
encourage visitors to seek out the real thing to find out what inspired
this massive effort. After all, if somebody goes to the trouble of
constructing copies of entire buildings in this way, they must think
pretty highly of the original.
What's significant here is that this building piracy can be seen as part
of a new trend -- the rise of a high-speed cut-and-paste approach to
urban design based around architectural mashups:
Dutch architect Rem Koolhaas, who designed
Beijing's surreal, next-generation CCTV tower, has stated the
super-speed expansion of Chinese cities is producing architects who use
laptops to quickly cut and paste buildings into existence. Koolhaas, in
the book "Mutations," calls these architects Photoshop designers:
"Photoshop allows us to make collages of photographs -- (and) this is
the essence of (China's) architectural and urban production…. Design
today becomes as easy as Photoshop, even on the scale of a city."
Fortunately, the architect of the cloned Wangjing SOHO seems to agree:
Zaha Hadid said she has a philosophical stance on the
replication of her designs: If future generations of these cloned
buildings display innovative mutations, "that could be quite exciting."
Not only that: these pirate mutations will boost her
already-considerable reputation in China yet further, and enrich her
artistic legacy.
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