In Shijiazhuang, a city that is going through a period of revitalization and transformation through innovative planning and architecture, Ma Yansong / MAD Architects plan the Cloud 9 sports center, a complex that covers six thousand square meters with numerous facilities and programs, designed to give rise to a vibrant urban space.

Located in the northern part of the CBD's Central Park, which represents an oasis for the city center, the project is surrounded by residential, commercial and recreational services. Cloud 9 adapts to its environment by preserving the key historical structures of the area and integrating features to improve functionality and environmental sustainability, and does so with the aim of serving as a space for sports as well as an extension of the park itself.
The project by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects has a membrane that surrounds the volume using a translucent material that reflects the surrounding environment, mitigating the visual obstructions it causes and generating a soft and fluid perception of the exterior, a luminous cloud that reflects the natural environment and seeks serve as a buffer between the Sports Center and the city.

Composed of a gym, indoor and outdoor tennis courts, commercial spaces, terraces, plazas and observation platforms, the building carefully arranges green spaces around it, achieving its integration into the park and giving rise to spaces for relaxation and leisure and thus facilitating community access through it.


Cloud 9 Sports Center by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects. Rendering by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects.
 

Project description by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects

Shijiazhuang, a city with a history rooted in early 20th-century railway construction, is undergoing a significant transformation. In 2018, the city began a journey to revitalized its central business district (CBD), through innovative planning and architecture while preserving key historic structures, transforming it into a vibrant urban space.

Located in the northern part of the CBD's Central Park, the Cloud 9 Sports Center designed by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects, spans approximately 6,000 square meters, featuring an athletic complex with facilities including a gym, indoor and outdoor tennis courts, and commercial spaces.  Surrounded by residential, commercial, and recreational amenities, Central Park represents a unique oasis for locals within the city.

MAD designed the sports center to integrate with its surroundings, serving not only as an exercise venue but also as an extension of the park itself. The building's soft and fluid exterior is wrapped in a translucent membrane material, creating a luminous "cloud" that mirrors the natural surroundings. Public areas, outdoor courts and green spaces are thoughtfully arranged around the building and integrated with the park to enhance community access.



Cloud 9 Sports Center by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects. Rendering by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects.

The center's design integrated several features early in the process to enhance both its functionality and environmental sustainability. Cooling towers, strategically positioned on the second-floor address underground ventilation issues, optimizing air circulation and freeing up nearly 5,200 cubic meters of ground space for recreation. Additionally, the first-floor roof extends towards the park and has been partially covered with green plants, blending the form with its surrounding environment.

The outer skin of the building's second and third floors utilizes ETFE membrane material with a metallic coating. Considering the buildings impact on the surrounding park, this membrane reflects the surrounding environment helping conceal the building's volume and mitigating visual obstructions caused by the cooling tower.  The building facade showcases the urban environment and visitor activities, transforming the sports center into an immersive display of urban life.

A semi-outdoor staircase was designed on the building's side facing Central Park. This vertical feature allows people, even those not using the sports facilities, to access the rest bar along the stairs and climb to the third-floor observation deck for panoramic views of the park and surrounding city.


Cloud 9 Sports Center by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects. Rendering by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects.

The gym on the top floor features a fully transparent glass curtain wall, offering a 360° view of the urban and natural surroundings to those exercising.

Similarly, the indoor tennis court is linked to an underground commercial street and subway, benefiting from a transparent glass curtain wall that allows natural light to illuminate the space.

Ma Yansong/MAD Architects designed the green slope and second-floor platform to act as a buffer between the Sports Center and the city. A circular running track connects the building to Central Park, along with outdoor courts, terraced squares, and observation decks enhancing recreational space for sports, relaxation, and leisure.

Cloud 9 Sports Center broke ground in March 2024 and is expected to be completed in 2025.

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Architects
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MAD Architects / Ma Yansong. Principal Partners.- Ma Yansong, Dang Qun, Yosuke Hayano.
Associate Partner.- Kin Li.
 
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Project team
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Guo Xuan, Pan Siyi, Miao Fangyi, Lai Hanzhang, Deng Wei, Qiao Xuantong, Wang Fei, Wang Lei, Li Cunhao.
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Collaborators
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Architectural Design.- MAD Architectural Affairs Institute.
Executive Architect.- Norendar international Ltd.
Interior Design.- MAD Architects, IDL
Structural Engineer.- CABR Technology Co.,Ltd.
Landscape Consultant.- SWA Group
Curtain Wall Consultant.- Inhabit
Lighting Consultant.- Beijing Ning Field Lighting Design Co.,Ltd.
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Client
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Shijiazhuang Central Business District Development Co., Ltd.
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Area
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Site Area: About 6,000 sqm.
Construction Area.- 5,217 sqm.
Above-Ground Construction Area.- 2,299 sqm.
Underground Construction Area.- 2,918 sqm.
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Dates
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2021 – 2025.
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Location
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Shijiazhuang, China.
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mad is a Beijing-based architecture design office dedicated to creating innovative projects. Founded by Ma Yansong in 2004, MAD Architects is led by Ma Yansong, Dang Qun, and Yosuke Hayano. It is committed to developing futuristic, organic, technologically advanced designs that embody a contemporary interpretation of the Eastern affinity for nature. With a vision for the city of the future based on the spiritual and emotional needs of residents, MAD endeavours to create a balance between humanity, the city, and the environment.

MAD's projects encompass urban planning, urban complexes, municipal buildings, museums, theatres, concert halls, and housing, as well as art and design. Their projects are located in China, Canada, France, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, and the United States. In 2006, MAD won the design competition for the Absolute Towers in Mississauga, Canada. Through this, MAD became the first Chinese architecture firm to build a significant high-rise project abroad. In 2014, MAD was selected as the principal designer for the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art in Los Angeles, USA, becoming the first China-based architecture firm to design an overseas cultural landmark. MAD’s signature cultural projects include Ordos Museum (2011, China), Harbin Opera House (2015, China), Tunnel of Light (2018, Japan), China Philharmonic Concert Hall (under construction), Yiwu Grand Theater (under construction), FENIX Museum of Migration in Rotterdam (under construction), Cloudscape of Haikou (2021, China), and Shenzhen Bay Culture Square (under construction). Other urban projects include the Clover House kindergarten (2015, Japan), Chaoyang Park Plaza (2017, China), China Entrepreneur Forum Conference Centre (2021, China), Jiaxing Train Station (under construction), Quzhou Sports Campus (under construction), and Nanjing Zendai Himalayas Center (under construction), among others.

While practising architecture, MAD documents and discusses its reflections on architecture, culture, and arts through publications, architectural exhibitions, as well as academic lectures and presentations. MAD’s publications include Mad Dinner, Bright City, MA YANSONG: From (Global) Modernity to (Local) Tradition, Shanshui City, and MAD X. MAD has organized and participated in several contemporary art and design exhibitions, including MAD X, a solo exhibition at the Centre Pompidou in 2019; Shanshui City, at UCCA in 2014; Feelings are Facts, a spatial experience exhibition with artist Ólafur Eliasson at UCCA in 2010; and MAD in China, a solo exhibition at the Danish Architectural Center, Copenhagen in 2007. MAD has participated in significant exhibitions at several iterations of the Venice Architecture Biennale and Milan Design Week. MAD has also participated in exhibitions at the Victoria and Albert Museum (London), the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art (Copenhagen), and MAXXI (Rome). An array of MAD’s architecture models have been acquired by the Centre Pompidou and M+ Museum (Hong Kong) as part of their permanent collections.

MAD has offices in Beijing (China), Jiaxing (China), Los Angeles (USA), and Rome (Italy).

Ma Yansong, Yosuke Hayano and Qun Dand.

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Ma Yansong is a Beijing-born architect (1975) recognized as an important voice in a new generation of architects. He graduated from the Beijing Institute of Civil Engineering and Architecture. Ma attended Yale University after receiving the American Institute of Architects Scholarship for Advanced Architecture Research in 2001 and holds a master's degree in Architecture from Yale. 

He shares his knowledge as an adjunct professor at the Beijing University of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Tsinghua University, and the University of Southern California. Ma Yansong's journey is a continuous narrative unfolding, exploring innovation and pushing the boundaries of what we perceive as the built environment.

Since the founding of MAD in 2004, his works in architecture and art have been widely published and exhibited. Ma Yansong was awarded the 2006 Architecture League Young Architects Award. In 2008 he was selected as one of the twenty most influential Young Architects today by ICON magazine and Fast Company named him one of the ten most creative people in architecture in 2009. In 2010 he became the first architect from China to receive a RIBA fellowship.

“I work with emotion and with the context. When I design a building, I close my eyes and feel as if I saw a virtual world which lays half way between the city, the nature and the land. It goes from large scale to small scale. Many things travel in front of my eyes; I feel them and try to find the way to express my feelings. The language I use is the least important of it all. It does not matter whether they are straight lines, curves... I only intend for people to feel the same or to find something unexpected” says Ma Yansong. “MAD is an attitude, a posture towards architecture, towards society. Through our work we want people to be inspired by a place through local nature, time and space”, he states.

Photograph by Daniel J.Allen

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Published on: May 9, 2024
Cite: "A soft cloud of reflects. Cloud 9 Sports Center by Ma Yansong/MAD Architects" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/a-soft-cloud-reflects-cloud-9-sports-center-ma-yansongmad-architects> ISSN 1139-6415
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