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    Importing American architectureto China: the practice of JohnPortman & Associates in Shanghai

    Charlie Qiuli Xue, Yingchun Li Division of Building Science and Technology,City University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong

    The urban space of Shanghai has been forcefully shaped by American architects during thepast thirty years. Among these movers and shakers, John Portman & Associates is the most

    notable because it was the pioneering American commercial design practice to enter

    Shanghai. It has actively participated in the process of Chinese urbanisation since the

    early 1980s. This paper reviews the practices design projects in Shanghai: namely, the

    Shanghai Centre, the Bund Centre and Tomorrow Square. Each project its intention,

    design, and usage is analysed from the perspective of Chinese modernity in a global-

    local context. The authors try to reveal the historic process of how American design

    rewove the urban fabric of Shanghai, and the reasons for and impacts of importing architec-

    ture from the West to contemporary China.

    1. Introduction

    Since the open door policy was adopted, China has

    undertaken a drive towards modernisation and wit-

    nessed an exponential growth in construction

    activity. From the 1980s, large-scale building works

    designed by foreign architects have spread from

    the coast and into the hinterland cities. A similar

    importation of overseas design was seen in the

    Middle East in the 1970s, and in Japan and other

    fast-growing Asian countries in the 1980s1990s.

    But none of the countries in the world has experi-

    enced the importation of foreign architectural

    design of such immense quantity in such a short

    period.

    The staggering increase of foreign-designed

    buildings is driven by Chinas open door policy, the

    steady pace toward modernisation and the develo-

    pers intentions of promoting their image interna-

    tionally. Now that Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou

    and other cities are determined to become inter-

    national metropolises, they must follow the lead

    of existing world cities such as London, New Yorkand Tokyo. To help shape the international metropo-

    lis, international architects of repute may be invited

    to propose designs rather than relying solely on the

    expertise of local design institutes.1

    Historically, Chinese modernity in Shanghai spans

    from the late 1920s, to its climax in the 1930s. The

    spatial backdrop of Chinese modernity is its urban

    culture, physically shaped by American Art Deco-

    style buildings.2 This phenomenon of importation

    of foreign architectural design reappeared in China

    after the country adopted an open door policy in

    1980.

    Within the trend of importing foreign architecture

    to China, American design plays an important role,

    in terms of quantity and quality. According to Xue,

    American design firms have completed more than

    thirty building projects in Shanghai, the largest city

    and economic centre in China, since 1980: more

    than 60% are shopping arcades or Class A office

    complexes3 and they are generally regarded as

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    # 2008 The Journal of Architecture 13602365 DOI: 10.1080/13602360802214786

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    development milestones and landmarks in various

    districts. American designs obviously outnumber

    the building works designed by Japanese and Euro-

    pean architects in Shanghai during the same period.

    In fact, imported American design has rewoven

    the contemporary urban space and fabric of Shang-

    hai (Fig. 1). This is partly because of Shanghais

    (American Art Deco) tradition before communist

    rule, and the commercial model provided by Ameri-

    can architects most closely matching the modernity

    illusion of Shanghai people.4

    John Portman & Associates is the earliest Ameri-

    can architectural firm practising in Shanghai,

    where the firm has carried out a series of spectacular

    and impressive projects in both Shanghai and China

    generally. Only by reading Portman can one reach a

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    Importing American

    architecture to China

    Charlie Qiuli Xue,

    Yingchun Li

    Figure 1. The site plan

    of West Nanjing Road,

    section from Shimen

    Road to Changshu

    Road. One of the fiveCBDs in Shanghai, the

    areas buildings are

    mainly designed by

    overseas design

    practices, half of them

    American.

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    comprehensive picture of urban development in

    Shanghai during the past 30 years. Through investi-

    gation and analysis, the authors reveal how the

    American practice has played a unique role in recon-structing the urban space of Shanghai, and the

    internal and external reasons which enabled this

    process. The paper investigates three Portman build-

    ings from a perspective of global-local dichotomy

    and the construction of Chinese modernity. The

    cases are viewed as a bilateral process: on the one

    hand, they reconstruct the modern urban space

    of China, and on the other, they are accepted and

    modified according to local conditions and historic

    characteristics. By analysing the development

    process of the Portman buildings, the authorshope to gain a rational reading of the contemporary

    Chinese city.

    John Portman is a key and controversial figure of

    late modernist architecture in the United States.

    Portmans design follows some key principles: the

    deep concern for urban effect, the sensational

    and psychological satisfaction of people and the cre-

    ation of a place for being. This popular attitude

    actually challenged the orthodox modernism of the

    1960s. Portmans ideas, of combining design excel-

    lence with economic feasibility, and contributing to

    the community by bold and pragmatic architectural

    attempts, were extensively realised through his own

    practice both as architect and developer.5

    In early 1979, the Chinese vice-premier, Deng

    Xiaoping, made an ice-breaking visit to the United

    States, and lived in the West Peachtree Plaza Hotel

    Portman designed in Atlanta. Deng was impressed

    and invited Portman to design an hotel in China.6

    Portman visited China in the same year. Owing to

    the rigid policy of China at the time, Portman had

    to open his office in Hong Kong instead, so the

    first office opened its doors there in 1979; and in

    1993, a branch office was finally set up in Shanghai.It was one of the first American architectural prac-

    tices entering China during the early years of the

    open door policy in China. The company has

    designed more than 30 projects in China. Portmans

    visions were largely implemented in China because

    of his personal involvement in all design projects.

    Shanghai Centre (1990), Bund Centre (2002) and

    Tomorrow Square (2004) are the most important

    built projects of Portman in Shanghai; they exerted

    extensive influence on the urban space of Shanghai,

    and bore witness to the citys growth at differentperiods.

    2. Shanghai Centre: the outpost of American

    design

    The Shanghai Centre was conceived in 1981. The

    site was originally the executives residential quarters

    of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corpor-

    ation, built in 1906, and had the extended central

    axis of the Shanghai Exhibition Centre (originally

    Sino-Soviet Unions Friendship Building, 1955)

    running through the site. The project was a joint

    investment and development by the Shanghai Exhi-

    bition Centre, Portman Group, AIG of US and Kajima

    Corporation of Japan. It was designed by John

    Portman & Associates and the Kajima Corporation

    of Japan, with local design consultation by the East

    China Institute of Building Design, and was con-

    structed by the Kajima Corporation (general con-

    tractor). The Portman Group was the main

    developer, designer and estate manager. In the

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    beginning, Portman enacted a plan of making a

    building similar to his concept for the merchandise

    mart of Atlanta, USA, which aimed to promote

    demand for hotel and commercial space in a simi-

    larly declining older area. After long discussions

    with local government, the programme for the

    Shanghai Centre was finally confirmed as a

    complex of hotel, office, flats and retail spaces to

    appeal to expatriates living in Shanghai. Building

    construction started in 1986, and was completed

    in 1990.

    Costing 210 million US dollars, the Shanghai

    Centre has a gross floor area of 185,000 square

    metres and a building height of 165 metres; it was

    the tallest building in Shanghai when completed.

    The 48-storey Portman Ritz-Carlton Hotel is in the

    centre, and is flanked by two 34-storey towers of

    flats in the east and west. The office section is in

    the first eight storeys. A theatre of 1,000 seats is pro-

    jected towards the Nanjing Road, and retail stores

    and restaurants are packed into a two-storey-high

    podium. The prototype for these concentrated

    building blocks designed in a symmetric layout

    were first seen in Portmans cross plan at the Renais-

    sance Centre, Detroit, in 1976. It was here, perhaps

    for the first time, that Portman designed an urban

    courtyard space with high-rise towers enclosing its

    three sides. Its internal focus and sharp colour

    form a strong visual impact within the city. The tri-

    tower and court prototype has been repeated in

    other China projects: for example, the New Asian

    Centre (1994), Bund Centre (2002) and the Silver

    Tie Centre of Beijing (2007) (Fig. 2).

    Although a comprehensive building with compli-

    cated functions, the Shanghai Centre impresses

    people mainly as a semi-indoor atrium, visually and

    psychologically: open to the Nanjing Road, the

    four-storey-high atrium is supported by red painted

    columns, and two classical arches that mark vehicu-

    lar ingress and egress (Figs. 3, 4) . Central escalators

    and spiral staircases lead to the theatre, office and

    retail areas, surrounded by this vehicular drop-off

    route. Beside the vehicular route are pedestrian

    space, fountains, and a garden. Various elements

    are superimposed here: the simplified Chinese

    bracket (dougong), a spiral staircase, deformed

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    architecture to China

    Charlie Qiuli Xue,

    Yingchun Li

    Figure 2. Comparison

    of Portmans designs:

    (a) Renaissance Centre

    of Detroit, (b) Shanghai

    Centre, (c) New AsianCentre, (d) Bund Centre

    and (e) the Silver Tie

    Centre of Beijing all

    these buildings adopt a

    tri-tower prototype.

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    Roman arch and a decorated Chinese roofing porch,

    waterfall and pond with garden stones, intermixed

    with fashionable shops, a high podium and stone

    balustrades. All these reflect the designers imagin-

    ation of blending traditional Chinese culture (here

    mainly imperial Beijing culture) with American pop

    arts in the early years of globalisation. In this case,

    the designers used Chinese elements, although

    somewhat childish, partly from the design intentions

    of localising the public space concept and also pleas-

    ing expatriates. The red columns and Chinese

    elements no doubt bring a festive atmosphere to

    this semi-public space. In the early 1990s, this

    huge open space, mixed with modern and foreign

    flavours, strongly enticed people in Shanghai. On

    one hand, this lure embodied the western (mainly

    American) idea of modern civilisation, and on the

    other, it aroused a collective memory of Shanghai

    in its glorious 1930s big-nose foreigners, trendymotor cars, the smell of coffee and cakes... This col-

    lective memory was rediscovered mainly through

    films and books emerging from the early 1990s,

    but the Shanghai Centre told people physically

    about the charm and prosperity that Shanghai

    once had. The popularity of the Shanghai Centre is

    evidenced in two public awards recognising favour-

    able buildings in Shanghai, being the popular

    favourite in both 1995 and 1999.7

    The Shanghai Centre attracts people and extensive

    praise, mainly through its atrium and openness,

    rather than its tall mass. It became a tourist attraction

    in the early years of its operation, as design pro-

    fessionals, companies and schools organised tours

    of the Centre. A discussion seminar on the building

    was held, on which the local media reported enthu-

    siastically. This public space no doubt originates

    from Portmans continuous persistence in bringing

    together the public and the city. But in Shanghai,

    contrary to the designers desires, it contains some

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    Figure 3. Section of th

    Shanghai Centre.

    Figure 4. The entranc

    of the Shanghai Centr

    and the city.

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    exclusions and elements of alienation, partly becauseof its sharp contrast with peoples plain daily life.

    More precisely, we can identify the open space of

    the Shanghai Centre as a limited permitted space.

    As pointed out by Professor Saskia Sassen, a limited

    permitted space is a globalised space, which

    mainly serves international business people and

    elites. They form a new townscape (Figs. 5, 6).8

    A similar public enthusiasm for visiting building

    landmarks could be found in 1934, when Shanghais

    tallest building, the Park Hotel, designed by Ladi-

    slans Edward Hudec (18931958), was completed

    in the Nanjing Road. Clad with black granite and

    brown tiles, the building was designed in an Art

    Deco style and served international business

    people. During the late 1980s, Shanghai had

    already experienced a series of luxurious buildings

    designed by foreign architects: for example, the

    Garden Hotel (1989) by the Japanese firm Obayashi

    Corporation and the Hilton Hotel (1988) by Hong

    Kong architects Andrew Li and Alex Lui. Fabulous

    as they are, most of these buildings are enclosed,proud, coldly standing as they stare out at the city.

    The Shanghai Centre constituted an exemplar with

    its open gesture, which was further elaborated by

    later constructions, such as the popular Xintiandi

    (New Horizon, 2001), scheme by the American prac-

    tice Wood & Zapata.

    3. Bund Centre: townscape at the waterfront

    If the Shanghai Centre is a noble and enticing open

    space, the Bund Centre reflects more an image of a

    crown in the waterfront. The Bund Centre is

    located in a trapezoid plot of central land, defined

    by four roads named Yanan, Henan, Guangdong

    and Jiangxi. The Huangpu River is 200 metres

    away to its east, and the old Shanghai city (Qing

    Dynasty 18641911) is located towards its southern

    vicinity. In the early 1990s, the Shanghai Golden

    Bund Real Estate Co Ltd., a joint venture between

    Chinese-Indonesian enterprise and the Huangpu

    District, planned to build the best landmark in the

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    Importing American

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    Charlie Qiuli Xue,

    Yingchun Li

    Figure 5.

    Accommodating

    fashionable boutique

    shops, the court is both

    busy and airy, andshows the designers

    imagination of blending

    traditional Chinese

    culture with American

    pop arts in the early

    years of globalisation.

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    traditional Bund area, as the city entered the fastlane to growth. Unlike the Shanghai Centre, the

    client for the Bund Centre imposed some require-

    ments that architects felt reluctant to accept. If the

    Shanghai Centre partly realised the architects inten-

    tions, the Bund Centre was basically a product of the

    clients ideas.

    Costing 400million US dollars, the project started in

    1996 and was completed in 2002. Occupying a site of

    20,000 square metres, the building has a gross floor

    area of 190,000 square metres, with a similar layout

    to the Shanghai Centre. The 198-metre, 50-storey

    high office tower stands in the centre, topped with

    a crown, flanked by two 26-storey towers of flats.

    The three towers surround a sky-lit indoor atrium.

    During construction, the client changed one tower

    of flats to an hotel, and after completion another

    tower was changed to hotel use as well, in 2006,

    managed by the Westin Group (Fig. 7).

    The Westin Buffet is now synonymous with

    classy entertainment in Shanghai. The brand is

    partly defined by its successful interior design. Theconcept of an atrium first appeared in the Roman

    era, and was widely adopted during the Renais-

    sance. In the early 1960s, Portman might be argu-

    ably the first person to apply the atrium space to

    commercial buildings, mainly hotels, with contem-

    porary significance. The atrium space of the Bund

    Centre is four storeys high, and covered with steel

    trusses and a glass skylight. The tall main entrance

    of the hotel opens to the atrium, which is enriched

    by wide balconies on four sides, filled with restau-

    rants and entertainment shops. People experience

    a see and be seen thrill in this space. The deco-

    rated columns, cantilevered spiral staircases and pro-

    jecting semi-circular balconies, together with the

    exuberant plants and lighting, present a concerted

    effect of a dramatic and festive atmosphere. The

    interior space of the Bund Centre is a complete

    representation of the typical Portman hotel

    atrium in Shanghai, a pure work of postmodernism,

    rather than the ambiguous juxtaposition of Chinese

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    Figure 6. The limited

    permitted space in

    Shanghai, where

    ordinary Chinese peop

    were barredpsychologically and

    financially: (a) the

    foreigners park in

    modern Shanghai,

    1930s; (b) the atrium o

    the Shanghai Centre,

    1990; (c) Xintiandi

    plaza, 2001.

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    and western elements like the Shanghai Centre. It

    was what the client wanted, although the interior

    decoration was designed by a firm other than Port-

    mans (Fig. 8).

    The British Royal Crown is a symbol (logo) of the

    developer Golden Bund Real Estate. It was mainly

    the idea of the client. The design for the crown

    was revised sixteen times in two years. The steel

    crown consists of three groups of spatial, curvilinear

    rods. There are three layers of leaves. The inner and

    middle layers contain eight leaves separately, and

    the outer layer has sixteen leaves. Each leaf sits on

    a footing 6.45 metres high. The crown is 25

    metres high, 58 metres in diameter and 582 tons

    in weight. The silver-grey coloured crown is deco-

    rated with gold neon, and shines magnificently in

    the evening. In Shanghai, people mostly interpret

    this crown as a lotus flower (Fig. 9).

    The Bund Centre is the tallest building in the Bund

    area. But very few people in Shanghai know its

    name and the exact location. It is known for its

    highly raised crown, and also its dinner buffet in

    the elite section. The 198-metre high building

    aggressively dominates the symbolic skyline of the

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    Importing American

    architecture to China

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    Yingchun Li

    Figure 7. The Bund

    Centre, Shanghai,

    2002: left, the plan and

    layout are formal and

    grand typicalPortman style, which

    serves well commercial

    clients, especially

    hoteliers; right, site plan

    of the Bund Centre

    the building complex

    occupies a whole street

    block.

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    Shanghai Bund first built in the 1930s. However, the

    Bund Centre may balance and be read together with

    another group of tall buildings on the other side of

    the Huangpu River, the Oriental Pearl TV Tower

    and Jinmao Building of Pudong (Fig. 10).

    The Bund Centre scheme was initiated in 1993:

    most ideas, including the crown, came not from

    the architect but from the client. This work is not

    seen in any book or catalogue of John Portman &

    Associates.9 In the early 1990s, the submission and

    governmental control system were not yet estab-

    lished as they are now. The scheme, in such a sensi-

    tive heritage preservation district, was not

    developed through any professional committee.

    The Bund Centre was completed 12 years after

    the Shanghai Centre the very first Portman

    work in China. During this 12-year period, Shanghai

    experienced intensive construction on the two sides

    of the Huangpu River. Besides American and Japa-

    nese architects, European architects started their

    expedition in China. Against this backdrop, the

    Bund Centre is only one of many fabulous

    imported buildings: it was not popular in Shanghais

    architectural world.

    4. Tomorrow Square: iconic interpretation

    in the historic townscape

    Entering the twenty-first century, the Chinese gov-

    ernment demonstrated unprecedented zeal for

    connecting with the internationaltrack.10Although

    prepared earlier, Tomorrow Square was eventually

    completed in 2004.

    Tomorrow Square is located in a right-angled tra-

    pezoid site off the Nanjing and Huangpu Roads,

    close to the Peoples Park. The building was devel-

    oped by a joint venture of the NGS Group and the

    Pudong Development Bank the client is a semi-

    state-owned organisation. The Peoples Park was

    once the horse racecourse of the British concession

    in 1862, and a typical limited permit space in old

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    Figure 8. Atrium and

    entrance of the Bund

    Centre: it is always bu

    and noisy in Portmans

    shared space.

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    Shanghai. The area is virtually the heart of central

    Shanghai, and has been paid high attention by the

    government. During the inception period of Tomor-

    row Square, the area already saw several key public

    buildings completed the Shanghai Museum

    (1993), designed by Xing Tonghe of the Shanghai

    Institute of Building Design, and the Grand Shanghai

    Theatre(1998), by Jean-Marie Charpentier et Associes

    of France. The Tomorrow Square has a greater impact

    on the city owing to its height and image (Fig. 11).

    Tomorrow Square(Fig. 12)occupies a site of 11,340

    square metres, with a gross floor area of 93,000

    square metres. The 55-storey tower reaches 285

    metres, and was the tallest building on the west side

    of the Huangpu River when it was completed in

    2003. The tower is square in shape, and descends to

    the ground, surrounded by a round atrium. In this

    scheme, the six-storey podium was designed as food

    court, ballroom court and entrance to the under-

    ground. Retail shops are located from the 1st to 3rd

    floors; restaurants on the 4th floor, with conference

    centres and gyms on the 5th floor. The 7th to 35th

    floors of the tower are designed as office space, the

    36th floor acts as a facility and refuge floor, and the

    tower twists 45 degrees from the 37th floor, which

    marks the beginning of the hotel. During construc-

    tion, the office programme was changed to flats,

    and the office element was condensed into the

    podium floors. The cladding and external image of

    Tomorrow Square are well shaped, while the interior

    design and technical details are relatively rough, not

    compatible with what it deserves.

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    Importing American

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    Charlie Qiuli Xue,

    Yingchun Li

    Figure 9. The

    elaboration of the

    crown in the design

    process.

    Figure 10. The skyline

    of the Bund on the west

    bank of the Huangpu

    River: the Bund Centre,

    on the left-hand side,

    obviously dwarfs the

    traditional colonial

    buildings.

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    About the characteristics of Chinese modernity,

    Leo Lee, a Harvard University scholar, thinks that

    Chinas modernity is presented as the confrontation

    of the now and the ancient. The now is a critical

    moment, which breaks from the past, and connects

    to a splendid future.11 Architecturally, Tomorrow

    Square represents a modern breakaway.

    The other two Portman-designed buildings were

    developed by Chinese-foreign joint-venture compa-

    nies. Portman was even one of the developers for

    the Shanghai Centre. But Tomorrow Square was

    developed wholly by a local Shanghai company

    owned by the government. The design brief empha-

    sises that the building image should present the

    new period of economic development, face to the

    future, instead of backward looking.12 The

    Portman firm translated the governments expec-

    tation as a transformation of architectural style in

    the 21st century.13 The building presents the

    future with aluminium and glass materials, and

    the tall tower of (non-historical) geometric

    rotation. The towers sharp open top points to the

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    Figure 11. The People

    Square and Tomorrow

    Square.

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    sky and contains a small ball, which is lit by a flashing

    light hidden in the roof. It is a metaphor of an Orien-

    tal Pearl and also a dramatic landmark of Shanghai,

    the Pearl of the Orient. The sharp, open-top formof this tower appeared in the first-round scheme,

    and was firmly supported by an influential municipal

    leader. It attracted criticisms after it was completed,

    as the expensive pointed form has little pragmatic

    function.

    A similar symbolic approach appears in the design

    competition for the Jinmao Building, submitted by

    Portman & Associates in 1995, the same year that

    they initiated the scheme for Tomorrow Square.The

    Jinmao Building is located in the financial district of

    Lujiazui in Pudong, and is designated as first in

    Asia and landmark. Portmans entry scheme uses

    a square shape like a typical tower plan, but has

    the corners subtracted gradually in the upper

    floors. The design language is almost the same as

    Tomorrow Square. However, an international jury

    selected the pagoda scheme better to represent

    the modern plus nostalgia ideas, designed by

    SOM from Chicago. The Global Financial Centre,

    another landmark building next to the Jinmao in

    Pudong, designed by KPF of theUSA, uses a moon

    gate image in its scheme (Fig. 13).

    Tomorrow Square, the Jinmao Building, and the

    Global Financial Centre were all prepared in 1993,when the municipal government opened the way

    to booming urban construction and hoped that

    these structures would herald Shanghais new era

    as an international metropolis. The design of all

    three buildings was committed to American archi-

    tects. The late comers from the US projected their

    traditional oriental ideas onto the buildings the

    pagoda and the moon gate. They proposed to rede-

    fine the cultural status of Shanghai. Their intentions

    were realised through the support of the inter-

    national jury. In contrast, the three jury members

    for Tomorrow Square were all local. Two other

    entries for Tomorrow Square were criticised as too

    old, too traditional.14 Eventually, the three Ameri-

    can designs formed an interesting contradiction

    and irony: the newly developed Pudong area

    appeals to Chinese tradition, while in the Nanjing

    Road, once the Champs-Elysees of the Oriental

    Paris, an abstract non-historical landmark stands.

    This irony resulted from the expectations of different

    328

    Importing American

    architecture to China

    Charlie Qiuli Xue,

    Yingchun Li

    Figure 12. Tomorrow

    Square, Shanghai, by

    John Portman &

    Associates, 2003: the

    apex of the tower is alandmark in the old

    settlement on the west

    bank of the Huangpu

    River.

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    Shanghai. The work of Japanese architects is consist-

    ently introverted and rational, so they made little

    impact in the city.16 The European architects

    works are mainly in cultural and residential build-

    ings, some of an experimental nature, but of a

    smaller scale. It is in the West Nanjing Road area,

    one of the five central business districts in Shanghai,

    where Shanghai Centre and Tomorrow Square are

    located, that most landmark buildings are designed

    by American practices. For example, Plaza 66 by KPF,

    Citic Plaza by Callison Architecture, Inc., and Jiubai

    Urban Plaza by Jon Jerdes (Fig. 14). From 2003,

    the historic Bund area was under stricter preser-

    vation control, and high-rise buildings have, basi-

    cally, been prohibited. Therefore, the Bund Centre

    will be always prominent in the area. The developer

    Sinar Mas Group is preparing a new sister crown

    building at northern Bund, and an American archi-

    tect is designated again.17

    This special passion for American design might

    be logically consistent with Chinese modernity,

    as explained by Professor Leo Lee. According to

    Lee, Chinese modernity appeared in the 1920s.

    The English word modern, in addition to its

    primary meaning of characteristic of the present

    or recent times, as distinguished from the

    remote past, is directly adopted through its pro-

    nunciation into the Chinese language as mo

    deng, literally, new and fashionable.18 The

    worship of the modern happened after American

    consumerist pop culture landed in Shanghai.19

    The transformation from the former British capital-

    ist spirit (sometimes characterised as Victorian

    style) in the late nineteenth century to American

    culture resulted in numerous skyscrapers with

    American Art Deco style in the 1930s: decoration,

    special pattern, colour, lighting, texture, liveliness

    and a somewhat na ve optimism. Most of these

    buildings were not designed by American archi-

    tects, but they share similar features with what

    appeared in San Francisco, Los Angeles and

    New York at the time.

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    Charlie Qiuli Xue,

    Yingchun Li

    Figure 14. Panoramic

    view of West Nanjing

    Road, 2003: Tomorrow

    Square is on the far

    right; the tallestbuilding on the left-

    hand side is Plaza 66,

    designed by KPF.

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    The building of the Shanghai Centre, with its

    American design, strategically led to the urban

    reconstruction of the area, which had stagnated

    with the townscape of the 1940s. The ShanghaiCentre is pivotal to Portmans ideas about revitalis-

    ing the old city and providing effective public

    space. He himself was one of the developers, and

    could fully display his role of architect as develo-

    per. In the latter two buildings, governmental

    expectations and control increased. The royal

    crown proposed for the Bund Centre was hard

    for the designer to accept, and Portmans influence

    decreased as a result. Portman is mature in shaping

    a place for being throughout his comprehensive

    commercial projects. His skills and productswarmly embraced the rising commercial tide of

    the Chinese coastal city of Shanghai. The buildings

    discussed in this paper highlight three different

    forces: the Shanghai Centre represents the force

    of the architect, who dreamed of localising com-

    mercial and public space; the Bund Centre rep-

    resents the force of developer in a situation of

    loose governmental control; and Tomorrow

    Square best presents the choice and decision of

    government.

    As indicated previously, the influence of the West

    is cardinal to the collective memory of Shanghai

    since it was first designed to serve as the foremost

    Chinese colonial city for the Western powers. Port-

    mans designs, especially for the Shanghai Centre,

    create a bridge between old and new by paying

    homage to Shanghais architectural past while pro-

    viding a contemporary focus for the success of

    Shanghai and its people. In this way, they no

    doubt strengthen a place for being in the city.

    The rapid reconstruction of urban space in Shang-

    hai is being carried out against a background of

    global consumerism, and global-local interaction.

    After China joined the World Trade Organisation in2001, the permeation of overseas design practices

    is more obvious: from hotel, grand theatre, to shop-

    ping arcade and residential building. When review-

    ing the trend of foreign design in China, the work

    of John Portman provides an amazingly significant

    vision.

    Acknowledgements

    This paper is part of the outcomes supported by the

    Division of Building Science and Technology, City

    University of Hong Kong, DRG(CX) 01/0809. Theauthors heartily thank Mr. Walter N. Jackson, the

    principal representative of the Shanghai Branch

    and vice president of John Portman & Associates,

    and Li Aiguo of the Urban Planning Management

    Bureau of Jingan District, Shanghai, for their kind

    interview; and Professors Zheng Shiling and Chang

    Qing of Tongji University, for their generous

    support of the project. The authors also owe their

    gratitude to Li Xianjun of Portman & Associates

    and Ling Ling of Time Architecture who both

    helped to provide a lot of useful materials, and to

    Luther Tsai for his excellent English editing.

    Figure 2 (a) (b) (c) (e), Figures 9, 11, 12 plan and

    section, 13 (a) (b), appear courtesy of John

    Portman & Associates; Figures 2 (d) and 7 appear

    courtesy of the owner of the Bund Centre;

    Figure 3 is taken from Highrise Buildings of Shanghai

    in the 1980s (Shanghai, Shanghai Press of Science

    and Technology, 1993); Figure 10, photograph by

    Tang Zhong; and Figure 14 made available by

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    Jingan District government, Shanghai. The authors

    are especially grateful for the wonderful art works

    made available to them by all the foregoing. The

    authors are grateful for the constructive commentsfrom two anonymous referees.

    Notes and references1. On the importation of foreign architecture to China,

    see Charlie Q. L. Xue, Building a Revolution: Chinese

    architecture since 1980 (Hong Kong, Hong Kong Uni-

    versity Press, 2006) and Jeffery W. Cody, Exporting

    American Architecture: 18702000 (London, Routle-

    dge, 2003).

    2. Leo O. Lee, ShanghaiModern the flowering of a new

    urban culture in China: 19301945 (Cambridge,

    Mass., Harvard University Press, 1999).

    3. Charlie Q. L. Xue, The Global Impact: overseas archi-

    tectural design in China (Shanghai, Tongji University

    Press, 2006) and Charlie Q. L. Xue, World Architecture

    in China, Importation and Adaptation 1978 2008

    (Hong Kong, Joint Publication Ltd., 2008).

    4. Charlie Q. L. Xue and Peng Nu, An alternative moder-

    nity and metropolitan fantasy, an analysis of space of

    architecture by Japanese architects since 1980, Time

    Architecture, No.6 (2006), pp. 1249. On the tradition

    of Art Deco in Shanghai, see Xu Yihong, Art Deco: The

    relationship of Chinese and western modern architec-

    ture (Southeast China University Press, 2006).

    5. For the career of John Portman, see Paolo Riani, Paul

    Goldberger and John Portman, John Portman, lArcae-

    ditionI (1990); John Portman and Jonathan Barnett,

    The architect as developer (New York, McGraw-Hill,

    1976); and John Portman and Associates: selected

    and current works, ed., Steve Womersley (Mulgrave,

    Vic, Images Publishing, 2002).

    6. Interview with Walter N. Jackson, August 27th, 2006.

    And also from The Document Office of the Communist

    Party of China, Chronology of Deng Xiaoping (Docu-

    ment Press of the Communist Party of China, 2004).

    7. Charlie Q. L. Xue, The ten celebrities in Hong Kong and

    Shanghai, World Architecture, No.9 (Beijing,2000),

    pp. 7780.

    8. Saskia Sassen, Cities in a World Economy (Thousand

    Oaks, California, Pine Forge Press, 1994).

    9. In the design of the Bund Centre, big differences

    occurred between the designer and client. In our inter-

    view with Mr. Walter N. Jackson, he did not even

    acknowledge that the Bund Centre was designed by

    John Portman & Associates.

    10. Connecting with the international track is a slogan

    adopted in the new millennium. It reflects the Chinese

    governments determination to join the global village.

    Working methods and urban architecture are expected

    to refer to advanced Western models.

    11. Leo O. Lee, Shanghai Modern the flowering of a

    new urban culture in China: 1930 1945, op. cit.,

    pp. 534.

    12. John Portman & Associates, Tomorrow Square, Time

    Architecture, No.3 (2002), pp. 547.

    13. Ibid., remarks by Jack Portman.

    14. The selection process for Tomorrow Square was

    revealed by one of the jury members to the authors:

    e-mail of January, 2007.

    15. Interview with Walter N. Jackson, op. cit.

    16. Charlie Q. L. Xue and Peng Nu, An alternative moder-

    nity and metropolitan fantasy, an analysis of space ofarchitecture by Japanese architects since 1980, op.

    cit., pp. 1249.

    17. Professor Zheng Shiling, speaking at the seminar

    on The Global Impact overseas architectural

    design in China, Tongji University, December

    25th, 2006.

    18. This principal meaning of modern is taken from the

    online Oxford English Dictionary, http://dictionary.

    oed.com/cgi/entry/00313097?single1&query_type

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    word&querywordmodern&first1&max_to_show10.

    The Chinese interpretation is from the Ci hai (Sea of

    Glossary), Shanghai ci shu chu ban she (Shanghai Press

    of Dictionary, 2000).

    19. According to research into early Shanghai, imported

    buildings first appeared in simple British colonial

    style: for example, the verandah form in the late nine-

    teenth century. The more majestic American Art Deco

    buildings replaced the old style in the 1930s. See

    Chang Qing, ed., Origin of a Metropolis a study

    on the Bund Section of Nanjing Road in Shanghai

    (Shanghai, Tongji University Press, 2005); Lynn Pan,

    Shanghai Style (Hong Kong, Joint Publication Ltd.,

    2008); and Leo O. Lee, Shanghai Modern, op. cit.

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