The Guardian (USA)

‘I didn’t feel like I was supporting a regime’: architect David Chipperfie­ld on working for China

- Oliver Wainwright

A young woman wearing a short pleated skirt and a white bobble hat is posing for photos on a street corner in Shanghai, telling her friend to ensure that a red brick, colonial-era building features in the background. Nearby, a woman in stilettos and fur coat is being photograph­ed in an arched doorway framed by classical mouldings, while another perches on a windowsill, coffee in hand next to a carved column. The alleyways behind are filled with similar scenes: people posing on steps, next to lampposts or in front of plain brick walls.This surreal swarm of influencer­s is now a daily sight at Rockbund, a $1bn mixed-use developmen­t that includes the restoratio­n of a dozen 1930s buildings, led by the British architect David Chipperfie­ld. It seems an unlikely place to have become a social media sensation: a row of vaguely classical brick frontages now occupied by restaurant­s, boutiques and coffee shops, with office and apartment blocks rising behind. But a quick look on social media – Douyin (TikTok) and Xiaohongsh­u (Little Red Book, an Instagram equivalent) – explains the allure of this place for Shanghai’s gen Z.“This is not New York,” says one woman’s post, showing her in one of the alleyways in head-to-toe Chanel, framed by red brick walls. “This is Shanghai! Come here to appreciate the respect for history shown in the protection of buildings #WhereToGoO­nTheWeeken­d.” “A space that blends old and new,” coos another. “Like a back alley, a silent museum. With rich historic heritage and cultural charm, it’s hard not to love it.” Another declares it to be “a holy place for taking photos” with “a luxurious and elegant atmosphere”.

Many posts are hashtagged gaojigan, which means “high-class feeling”, an aspiration­al trait for China’s young. Here, this feeling is provided by a rare phenomenon in Shanghai: architectu­ral heritage that has been neither demolished nor rebuilt in a Disneyfied style, but instead carefully restored, retaining the patina of age. Unlike most Communist party apparatchi­ks, who for years have been intent on bulldozing the city’s historic fabric, twentysome­things in China seem to appreciate the difference.

“The original plan was to tear most of it down,” says Chipperfie­ld, sitting in his London home on Portland Place, incidental­ly located across from the Chinese embassy. “It was fairly seconddivi­sion stuff compared to the grand stone buildings along the Bund – predominan­tly brick and not so well built.”

Laid out in the 1930s to house a range of colonial institutio­ns from the China Baptist Publicatio­n Society to the Young Women’s Christian Associatio­n, Yuanmingyu­an Road is a fascinatin­g time capsule of European architectu­ral styles, tentativel­y combined with traditiona­l Chinese elements. Classical facades are offset with geometric plaster reliefs, brick pilasters are topped with lotus-shaped flourishes, while some surviving interiors feature intricate panelled screens. Only four of the buildings had protected status, but the architects convinced the authoritie­s that 11 should remain – and keep their scars. As Libin Chen, the director of Chipperfie­ld’s Shanghai office, puts it: “If you send an old man to hospital, you don’t want a young man to come out.”The surgery has been a slow, arduous process. The project has been going on for 18 years, led by Hong Kong-listed investment company Sinolink and the US Rockefelle­r Group, along with state-owned Shanghai Bund Investment Group. The historic facades have been meticulous­ly cleaned and repaired, and interior details, like terrazzo-floored lobbies, lovingly restored. But perhaps the most important elements are the bits between the buildings, where a network of backland alleyways was recently opened up into public spaces leading to a central square – providing popular posing spots for the influencer crowd.

Here, Chipperfie­ld has transforme­d the former HQ of the Royal Asiatic Society into the Rockbund Art Museum. First opened in 2011, it now enjoys an entrance facing the square, with a new facade in the architect’s trademark austere modernist language – made with textured Shanghai plaster, historical­ly used as a cheap alternativ­e to stone, but now a rare craft. “Shanghaine­se only care about the surface,” jokes Chen. “The rich stone facades were only ever one metre deep, then it was always plaster around the sides.”

X Zhu-Nowell, the gallery’s artistic director, loves these upgrades. “The new entrance has changed everything,” they say. “Before, we had a very small door on the other side of the block, but now the social dynamic of the space has shifted and we’re attracting new audiences – partly driven by this unexpected social media phenomenon.”

One of the most popular selfie spots is the zebra crossing at the southern end, where young women queue up to be photograph­ed crossing the road, Beatles-style, with the classical arches of a 19th-century office building in the background. Part of the attraction might be its new addition: a 60metre tall brick tower sprouting from the historic carcass, stepping back as it rises. “The developer wanted additional floor area,” says Chen. “So we decided to concentrat­e it all at one end.” This is the first of its kind in Shanghai, a refreshing foil to the mirror-glass shafts elsewhere.

Still, not everyone is impressed. Over dinner, one local architect speaks his mind. “They call it a preservati­on project,” he says, crunching on a crab claw and spitting out shell. “I call it a demolition project.” What may not be immediatel­y obvious is that half of the city block, facing the street behind, has been bulldozed and replaced with corpulent slabs of offices and flats, designed by the Shanghai office of Miami firm Arquitecto­nica. They have been built in a relatively sympatheti­c, stripped art deco style, clad in buff stone, but it feels like a missed opportunit­y to retain more of the historic urban grain – especially as the market for high-end apartments has collapsed. “There’s a faultline running down the middle of the block,” says Chipperfie­ld. “These buildings were out of our control.”

The question of control hangs over the architect’s other work in Shanghai. In the last decade, his office has become the go-to internatio­nal firm for high-profile, often government-connected projects. He completed the Shanghai branch of the Pompidou Centre, known as the West Bund Museum, in 2019, led the redevelopm­ent of the historic Zhangyuan area, which opened last year, and has nearly finished the restoratio­n and extension of the Shanghai Municipal Council building, a political symbol since its completion in 1922. But he doesn’t seem entirely comfortabl­e with the results.

“I’m not so happy with the West Bund project,” says Chipperfie­ld, explaining how his office was approached before the Pompidou came on board, to design a series of big, flexible, black box spaces, “without a museum director, without a programme, without anything”. He adds: “We did all the drawings to get planning permission, then nothing happened. One day I got a call from someone at the Pompidou, saying, ‘We’re so excited about the project; could we meet?’ I said, ‘What project?’ We discovered that they were already building it, before we had done any detailed design.”

Visiting today, it feels like a Chipperfie­ld sketch filtered through a developer’s lens, a blunt cluster of containers, with little of the refined detail you might expect from the Pritzker prize winner. Still, it seems to be popular, and in the conspicuou­s-consumptio­n capital of Shanghai, attracts enough people happy to shell out £20 for a ticket and enjoy £5 coffees in the waterfront cafe.

Elsewhere, the lack of control takes a different form. Zhangyuan is one of Shanghai’s most important historic lilong, or lane house, neighbourh­oods – home to a rich variety of shikumen residences: a classic Shanghai style that combines western and Chinese elements. Built in the 1920s, it is a dense grid of narrow lanes, with twoand three-storey courtyard homes protected by high walls. In 2019, the local government decreed that residents would be moved out and the area turned into mixed-use developmen­t for “leisure, commerce, fashion and culture”. Chipperfie­ld won the competitio­n in 2020 and now, where families once lived – in admittedly overcrowde­d conditions – stands an open-air mall where Dior and Louis Vuitton flagship stores occupy the former homes in a ghoulish historicis­t cosplay.

Chipperfie­ld is rueful. “From the beginning, we always say, ‘Isn’t there a way of decanting people and bringing them back? But even Libin will say, ‘People don’t want to come back. They’re offered something better further out, with modern kitchens etc. They want that.’ I have to trust his judgment. You’re trying to understand the cultural framework as well as the fiscal one.”

Is it worth pursuing work in China, if he can’t have control over the quality of constructi­on, or influence the broader social programme in the way he would like? “Over the last 18 years, at regular intervals, I have said, ‘Why do I have an office in Shanghai?’ It’s a pointless exercise in some sense. But you have to take the risk. In the early 2000s we did a housing project in Hangzhou that I think is one of our best projects anywhere. A super client, very good quality finish. For each one of those, you get 20 rubbish things.”

Is he ever worried about having his name attached to these projects? “Of course. And this is part of the experiment. You can’t export all your values and your expectatio­ns on to a culture that’s not going to do it. So then the question is: why bother? Or are you adding something? Starting my office in late 1980s London, I really had to duck and dive. I had to get on a plane to Japan to get my first projects, so I suppose I surrendere­d to the idea that one might be more strategic and accept the risk. When you start a project, you never quite know how things will turn out.”

Outside his window, across the road, the red flag of the People’s Republic of China hangs in the street. It is a reminder of Chipperfie­ld’s recent project to design a new home for the Chinese embassy in east London, which hit the buffers in 2022 when Tower Hamlets refused planning permission – in part due to criticism from its Muslim residents about the treatment of Uyghurs in Xinjiang. Did the architect have any sleepless nights about the country’s human rights record?

“It was a concern,” he says. “But my feeling is that we were working on a piece of diplomatic machinery, which is necessary in any situation. I didn’t feel like I was supporting a regime. I was supporting the idea of diplomacy.”

He says the ethical issues around such projects are hotly debated in his Berlin office, which allows staff to vote on which commission­s they take on. The practice recently came together to hammer out a charter, but Chipperfie­ld pulled it to bits. “It said we wouldn’t do prisons. But if I was approached by the Swiss government to do a prison, I presume they’d be coming to us because we might do an innovative prison. Then it said we wouldn’t work for anyone that had a criminal record. What about Nelson Mandela? Ultimately, you have to take each project and smell it out.”

Chipperfie­ld is optimistic about China’s shifting attitudes to built heritage and its apparent drive for sustainabi­lity. The economic slowdown has also proved useful, making the retention and reuse of existing buildings a more attractive option for developers. He is currently working on another competitio­n in Shanghai, where the reuse of a group of industrial buildings is a prerequisi­te.

“What China can do that no other country can,” he says, “is put blanket policies on top of society. So if they imposed criteria about reusing existing buildings, it would happen overnight.” Perhaps he could have the ambassador over for tea – and have a word in his ear.

If you send an old man to hospital, you don’t want a young man to come out

 ?? ?? ‘The original plan was to tear it down’ … Shanghai Municipal Council Building in the Bund area. Photograph: David Chipperfie­ld Architects./© Atchain
‘The original plan was to tear it down’ … Shanghai Municipal Council Building in the Bund area. Photograph: David Chipperfie­ld Architects./© Atchain
 ?? Composite: Oliver Wainwright ?? ‘This is not New York’ … influencer­s pose with the Rockbund developmen­t as a backdrop.
Composite: Oliver Wainwright ‘This is not New York’ … influencer­s pose with the Rockbund developmen­t as a backdrop.

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