FUTURISTIC ARCHITECTURE by Zaha Hadid Architects


The architect touches everything, winner of the Pritzker Prize in 2004, Zaha Hadid unveiled there is little a mammoth project that began to sprout last October in Changsha, a city of seven million people in southern China. Curves, knots of concrete, three buildings connected by bridges or walks creating, in the words of the architect, an urban experience. A little futuristic. 

Changsha Meixihu International Culture & Art Centre Animation from Zaha Hadid Architects onVimeo.


All-in-One 

The international artistic and cultural center of Changsha is an all-in-one to mark the power of the city and its cultural influence. There is a theater of 1,800 seats whose mission is to host the biggest shows. Bars, restaurants, private spaces included. Nerve center of the whole, it is the project and is in the heart of attention. Especially for the purest sound. 





Courtesy of Zaha Hadid Architecture 

The second area to be served is a contemporary art museum with many exhibition spaces organized around a central atrium with organic curves. The building will also include an outdoor space, taking advantage of the unique location of the site, allowing the outdoor exhibition of sculptures and other creations not fearing the weather. 

Courtesy of Zaha Hadid Architecture 

Of the three buildings, this is probably the least impressive, but still. This "little theater" or multipurpose room will have 500 seats and will organize cultural events or medium scale banquets, corporate or other seminars. 
Zaha Hadid: symbiotic architecture 

Courtesy of Zaha Hadid Architecture 

Although they are physically separated, the proposed agency Zaha Hadid architecture attempts to reconcile and even nest the various functions / opening hours of the three structures to allow urban and cultural experience / 24 24 Example the theater (and catering) opens at a time when the museum closes, while the last building will be open day and night. 

Courtesy of Zaha Hadid Architecture