Wide Open Ideas Competition for Tiananmen Square in Beijing, China List all recent news
Deadline: Closed This is the first of several competitions run to identify a range of possible design solutions, against a broad conceptual brief, with no commitment to build. They will be for significant design sites around the world. The aim of the Tiananmen Square Landscape Compeition is to generate debate and ideas for re-designing part of the most important urban space in the history of Chinese Civilization. We hope this will also set a new course for Eastern Landscape Architecture, helping in the development of an ecologically and culturally distinctive design tradition. This is a Web 2.0 landscape design competition running from March 2009 to June 2010. Prizes to be awarded by Gardenvisit.com Other prizes by other sponsors Judging the Tiananmen Square landscape competition Dates for the Tiananmen Square competition 1.The competition was announced in March 2009 Submissions for the Tiananmen Square landscape competition Submissions should be illustrated with 1-5 images. They can be montages, models or plans, 2d or 3d, hand-drawn or computer-drawn or photographs of physical models. When uploading an image to Flickr please use the description field to outline the design idea. Eligibility for the Tiananmen Square landscape competition How to enter for the Tiananmen Square landscape competition Further information on the Tiananmen Square landscape competition Tiananmen means 'Gate of Heavenly Peace'. The Gate was first built during the Ming Dynasty (1420) and the historic space was designed in 1651. Beijing, once known in Europe as Peking, is the best example of one of the world's foremost urban design traditions. Its dedication to Peace makes a wonderful contrast with the Triumphal Arches and Victory Avenues which litter Europe. China has a tradition of landscape and urban design which extends over 5,000 years - it began as cultivation was reaching the shores of North Europe. In 1958 the world's largest and bleakest 'urban square' was laid out on what was once an Altar of Agriculture. Tiananman Square now contains a Monument to the People's Heroes (1958) and the Mausoleum of Chairman Mao Zedong (1977). It is a vacant expanse of slabs with nowhere to sit and nothing to do. The landscape architecture profession in China has grown rapidly but now faces a supreme challenge: how to re-design Tiananmen Square. Though understandable, Tiananmen Square was a terrible blunder and this should be recognized. Only then can it become the brilliant centre of world peace and civilization which Beijing deserves. The current lack of design is understandable for three reasons: 1.China had no tradition of creating public open space in towns at the time Tiananmen Square was re-designed. Nor did it have a landscape architecture profession and nor did it have much cash. Tiananmen Square was an unsuccessful design for three reasons: 1.The section of Beijing's Ming capital it replaced should most certainly have been conserved Note: Ma Yansong has suggested foresting Tiananmen Square. For many Chinese people it remains a 'a spiritual holy land' which attracts crowds every day and only needs new paving. Others would like to have a great reflecting pool. Others would like to have new memoriasl. Others believe the present design should be faithfully conserved. |
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