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Jianfu Palace Garden

Beijing, China
Tsao & McKown Architects

Tsao & McKown and Pei Partnership collaborate on the interior architecture of a reconstructed portion of the Forbidden City.

By Suzanne Stephens and Clifford Pearson
This is an excerpt of an article from the July2008 edition of Architectural Record.

First came the reconstruction. Jianfu Palace Garden (Garden of the Palace of Established Happiness), a compound in the northwest corner of the Forbidden City in Beijing, burned down in 1923. The nine pavilions and other structures organized around courts and connected by walkways and gardens had originally been built in 1740 for Qianlong, a Qing Dynasty emperor. He desired a haven from the pressures of court in the 178-acre palace complex now famous for its 800 wood structures. After Sun Yat-sen came to power in 1911, the fire’s damage to these imperial traces were ignored.

Jianfu Palace Garden
Photo © Hisun Wong/China Heritage Fund

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Then, in the mid-1990s, the China Heritage Fund, a nonprofit organization founded by the chairman of the Hong Kong development company, Hang Lung Group, proposed to rebuild it. The fund, led by project director Happy Harun, worked with the Forbidden City Palace Museum on the arduous reconstruction.

The project not only involved researching archives and consulting old photographs, drawings, and paintings, but enlisting stonemasons, carpenters, tile workers, and painters knowledgeable in 18th-century crafts and building techniques. Still open to question were new uses for the buildings, as well as the design of the interiors. Hence, the next chapter began in 2004, when Harun contacted Calvin Tsao, FAIA, of Tsao & McKown Architects in New York. In proceeding with the interior architecture, Tsao looked to the Pei Partnership and its Beijing office to help guide the project along. Needless to say, the advent of the Olympics, and the entire restoration plan for the Forbidden City, made the timing all the more apropos.

The clients wanted the various structures to be reserved for special functions, exhibitions, and receptions. Here, dignitaries, donors, and scholars could gather in an area removed from the 7 million or so visitors who enter the Forbidden City each year. Tsao & McKown and Pei Partnership devoted their efforts mainly to four buildings (not including two for pantry and restrooms): the 11,000-square-foot main structure, the Pavilion of Prolonged Spring, for VIP receptions as well as banquets; the 2,500-square-foot Studio of Esteemed Excellence, for a multifunction hall; a 490-square-foot reception room in the small Tower of Auspicious Clouds; and the 3,650-square-foot museum in the Pavilion of Tranquil Ease. The team also needed to discreetly insert heating and cooling, lighting, and plumbing elements into all these spaces.

Formal name of project: Jianfu Palace Garden

Location: Beijing, China

Gross square footage: 18,000 sq.ft out of 30,139 sq.ft for reconstruction

Completion Date: November 2005

Owner:
The Palace Museum (Historical Architecture Conservation Center and Historical Architecture Department) and China Heritage Fund

Architect:
Tsao & McKown Architects
20 Vandam Street, Tenth Floor
New York, NY 10013
Tel 212 337-3800
Fax 212 337.0013
www.tsao-mckown.com/

Want the full story? Read the entire article in our July 2008 issue.

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