New Chinese Architecture: the “Wild East”

China’s rise as an economic power has prompted daring feats of construction; China’s getting known as the “Wild East” when it comes to this new construction. And they’re putting up new buildings at a tremendous pace: some 10,000 new structures in all, particularly with next year’s Olympics coming. I certainly witnessed it in Shanghai-Pudong a couple years back.

But now take, for example, the new, $800m, China Central Television Tower in Beijing, designed by Rem Koolhaas. Daring to defy the requirement that all skyscrapers point up, Mr. Koolhaas designed one that loops back on itself. The main feature: it’s got an overhang that’s an amazing 11 stories tall, 250 ft. above the ground. The building will be the world’s second-largest office building, after the Pentagon.

It’s now reaching a very precarious moment: the two halves of the building are being joined soon, according to the WSJ. First, it’s in an earthquake zone, so they had to test a three-story replica on a quake-testbed to make sure it’ll last because it’s like stacking two bridges together. Second, the two halves lean on each other so much that they must join the final pieces at dawn, so that the sun’s heat won’t distort or expand one half more than the other. I just hope the thing holds up.