China Central Television Headquarters Building

The new headquarters for China Central Television, is Office for Metropolitan Architecture’s (OMA) largest project to date and combines the entire process of TV-making – administration, production, broadcasting – into a single loop of interconnected activity. OMA is a leading international partnership practicing contemporary architecture, urbanism, and cultural analysis

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CCTV is an iconic building that, along with other masterpiece designs delivered in time for the 2008 Beijing Olympics, has changed the architectural image of China's capital. The façade of the leaning, conjoined towers was completed before the Games, for which CCTV was the official broadcaster, and a number of spaces inside the building opened to host televised events; however, the building was not be fully realised until the end of 2009.

Rising from a common platform accommodating production facilities, two towers – one dedicated to broadcasting, one to services, research, and education – lean towards each other and eventually merge in a dramatic, seemingly impossible cantilever. The building has no movement joints and is one of the world's largest single structural system; it is estimated that 20 percent less steel was used than in a single tower with the same gross floor area.

The building is constructed on a 10 hectare site adjacent to the Third Ring Road in Beijing, China, in the new Central Business District. The project was started in March 2003 following a review of the design by a panel of Chinese experts. The review was necessary since the ground-breaking design was in contravention of the city's existing building codes.

The development was undertaken by the Chinese Government as part of a plan to redevelop central Beijing with innovative and functional architecture, while preserving historic buildings at the same time.

The new building involves two L-shaped high-rise towers linked at the top and the bottom at an angle to form a loop, which has been described as a 'Z' criss-cross (other local descriptions include calling it a twisted doughnut and also 'the pants'). The linking level features 4m-wide glass floors allowing visitors to peer down a 162m drop below their feet.

Adjacent to the 'loop' is an additional tower, called the Television Cultural Centre (TVCC). The total construction cost of both buildings has been estimated at €850million (US$ 1.2billion). The CCTV tower employs 10,000 people and is allowing China State Television to broadcast 200 channels (previously they were limited to 16 channels).

CCTV Building Design

The building was co-designed by Rem Koolhaas and Ole Scheeren of the Office for Metropolitan Architecture (OMA) following a design competition organised by the Beijing International Tendering Company, which ended in December 2002.

The competition was between ten companies, including: Dominique Perrault; Kohn Pederson Fox and Skidmore, Owings and Merrill LLP; Toyo Ito and Associates; FCJZ of Beijing; the East China Architecture and Design Institute of Shanghai (ECADI) and OMA.

The international jury, including Architect Arata Isozaki and critic Charles Jencks narrowed the competition to three designs, by Toyo Ito and Associates with FCJZ of Beijing, the East China Architecture and Design Institute and OMA, before choosing the OMA design. On 18 October 2007 OMA were presented with an award at the Cityscape Architecture Review Awards Gala in Dubai for the CC Television headquarters in the mixed-use category.

CCTV Towers

The tallest tower (CCTV) is 234m high ,the smaller tower is 194m with a floor area of 465,000m² and consists of a series of horizontal and vertical sections establishing it as an earthbound structure and not a 'skyscraper'. This tower contains administration, news, broadcasting, studios, programme production areas, staff facilities and parking.

The remainder of the site around the building has been developed into a media park with outdoor filming areas, theatres, production facilities and public entertainment areas.

China Central Television Building Contractors and Construction

Ove Arup & Partners (Arup) (East Asia and European divisions) were the civil engineering contractors. They were responsible for structural and mechanical engineering of the structure. Arup also provided security consultancy services to the building, carrying out risk analysis and design of security systems.

OMA formed a design team to continue work on the building, which included the ECADI (as a domestic partner required under Chinese tender regulations) Qingyun Ma of Shanghai as strategic advisors and Arup. ABB transformers and switchgear have been installed in the building as the centre of the power infrastructure. There are 67 transformers and 90 UniGear ZS1 air-insulated switchgear units to power the building.

Structural Challenges

The structure of the CCTV building has been a challenge to the engineering contractors Arup. They have had to design a plan to construct the two 6° leaning towers that are bent at 90° at the top and bottom to meet, forming a continuous loop. The building was actually constructed in two tower sections that were then joined to complete the continuous loop.

The engineers had to consider the building's stability at each different phase of construction, and designed a braced tube structure to support the leaning towers during their development before they were connected and balanced off each other.

The towers have been constructed at opposite diagonal corners of a 160m × 160m footprint and linked by an L-shaped nine-storey podium with three underground floors. The elements are then co-joined at the top (51 storeys up) by an L-shaped bridge opposite the podium. The tower footprints are 40m × 60m and 52m × 42m. Thin concrete cores inside the building support the internal floors.

Diagrid Exoskeleton

A diagrid system 'exoskeleton' was adopted on the external faces of the building to give a tube structure that resists gravity and any other lateral forces. The positioning of the columns and diagonal tubes reflects the distribution of forces in the surface skin of the building. The columns of the diagrid have the same exposed width but the depth varies according to the load, while the diagonals are all 1m × 60cm plate girders, with only the steel thickness varying. A butterfly plate links perimeter columns, braces and beams.

Seismic Requirements

There are also strict seismic requirements for Beijing buildings that the design has had to conform to. The building has to have a resistance to intensity eight with a peak ground acceleration of 0.2g.

Arup has run an advanced non-linear computer simulation, the OASYS Dyna application, to determine the effect of seismic shock on the building's 40,000 structural elements.

Beijing Geotechnical Institute has also collaborated on the earthquake resistance part of the design as well as surveying the site for ground water levels.

CCTV Building Dimensions

Administration will be allocated 75,000m²; programme offices 65,000m²; news production 70,000m²; broadcasting 40,000m²; programme production 120,000m²; staff facilities 30,000m² and parking 65,000m². The tower is 234m high (54 floors) and has a footprint of 40m by 60m (2,400m²). The basement reaches 18m (four floors) underground.

The overhanging section expands from nine storeys at one end to 13 storeys at the other, with the bottom floor suspended 162m above ground. The base section of the 'loop' is 45m high (nine floors) with a building footprint of 160m by 160m, plus the overhang. In addition, the service building has 15,000m² of floor space and there is an 85,000m² parking facility.

Project Architects:

Charles Berman, David Chacon, Chris van Duijn, Erez Ella, Adrianne Fisher, Anu Leinonen, Andre Schmidt, Shohei Shigematsu, Hiromasa Shirai, Steven Smit

Team

Gabriela Bojalil, Joao Bravo Da Costa, Catarina Canas, Holly Chacon, Dan Cheong, Stephane Derveaux, Keren Engelman, Gaspard Estourgie,

Lighting designers - LPA of Tokyo.
High rise consultant - DMJMH+N of Los Angeles. Curtain walling - Front of New York.
Broadcast design - ECADI and Sandy Brown Associates of London.
Acoustics - Dorsser Blesgraaf of Eindhoven,
Scenography - Ducks Scéno of France
Vertical transportation - Lerch Bates & Associates of London.