Click any of the eight points on the map above to read about new architecture in Beijing. Click (-) to zoom out and see all eight projects. Click (+) to zoom in for a more detailed look at each project’s site. Click anywhere on the map to change locations.
Has any place changed so much, so quickly? In a pair of essays, two RECORD editors look at Beijing’s rapid transformation, try to make sense of the current boom, and ponder its future.
From Olympic venues and a massive airport terminal to an equally eye-catching residential development, the 15 projects that we profile this month—including work by Andreu, Foster, Herzog & de Meuron, Holl, Pei-Zhu, and other renowned designers—have helped place Beijing at the vanguard of 21st-Century architecture.
Architects, impresarios, and our own editors recommend Beijing destinations from bookstores, lounges, and artist-owned restaurants to parks and markets. Find out where to eat, sleep, or contemplate city life in China’s capital.
Thanks to a high demand for manual labor and contractors’ pressing deadlines, migrant workers represent nearly one quarter of Beijing’s population. In this photo essay, Photographer Iwan Baan focuses his camera on the people who are building the new Beijing.
Michael Meyer, author of The Last Days of Old Beijing: Life in the Vanishing Backstreets of a City Transformed, gives a firsthand account of the Chinese capital’s struggles to preserve its past in the face of rapid development and Olympic Glory.
Chéngyǔ or "set phrases" are Chinese four-character idioms. Their origins are in ancient literature, but they are still widely used today. We offer a small sampling of Chéngyǔ and their pronunciations—along with literal and figurative translations—that will be useful for architects working or traveling in Beijing.
Recent RECORD stories about architecture in China, including a critical examination of historic districts in Beijing and Shanghai, a study of an adaptive reuse project in the Forbidden City, a look at the technology behind the “Water Cube,” and a roundup of recent news headlines.
From the official site of the 2008 Summer Olympics and guides to the Beijing’s burgeoning nightlife to articles about China’s human rights record, the index below lists Web sites of interest to architects working or traveling in the city.