Both “Vector” and the firm’s Chinese name (Zhi Xiang, or “strict direction”) suggest Dong’s design intention: to be “straightforward and simple,” he says. Vector’s first project—a green-technology showroom in 2009 for developer China Resources (CR) Land—was a rectangular sales center that fronts a housing complex in Beijing. While China’s residential towers are typically standardized, unadventurous buildings cranked out by large design institutes, the structures built to attract buyers need to have more sizzle. So developers often hire talented young firms and give them a surprising amount of design freedom. For this project, Vector built a long, elevated steel tube punctuated by a painterly composition of windows and covered with a living green roof and walls—a design that is at once simple and complex. Vector has since completed two additional sales centers: a tranquil, inward-looking building that thwarts the surrounding construction in Hefei and a private building with a public observation tower in Liaoning.
Dong is one of many Chinese architects who studied and worked in the U.S. before returning home to establish their own practices. While in the U.S., he spent three years at Steven Holl Architects, working under Holl’s partner Li Hu on the Linked Hybrid complex in Beijing. (Li Hu has since set up his own firm, OPEN Architecture, in Beijing.) Dong says that in the U.S., he learned to eschew idealized concepts and instead start each design from site-specific information such as sunlight, wind forces, and local culture. This interest in phenomenology may partly come from working for Holl, but Dong notes the influence of Henry Plummer, his advisor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, who specializes in daylighting. Plummer’s hand can be seen in Vector’s Seashore Library in Nandaihe, which functions almost as a sundial. A broad eastern window and a low slit on the west bring dramatic morning and afternoon light into its main reading room, while a skylight in a windowless meeting room turns midday sun into a work of art in light.
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