Menhir - Xian train station, at Xi´an, China, by Claudio C. Araya

Menhir – Xian train station, at Xi´an, China, by Claudio C. Araya

Menhir - Xian train station, at Xi´an, China, by Claudio C. Araya
Menhir - Xian train station, at Xi´an, China, by Claudio C. Araya

Menhir - Xian train station, at Xi´an, China, by Claudio C. Araya 1MENHIR

In an age of rapid consumption, where yearning for technological growth and efficiency have become dogmatic, we fall easily to the distraction of internalizing a perceptive societal progress. The now, is rather a time to reflect upon the past, the surroundings in history and the elements of a previous age. We are but primitive beings accustomed to seemingly advanced methods of building. The complexity of the human should be separated by their technological counterpart, for history holds the complexity of the behavioral fingerprint of the human. We must resort to the timeless elements; earth and stone for they were once the symbols of travel. Humans once used large stones as marks of traveled areas, Xi’an train station can now become a place to arrive as part of a discourse with the symbols of our ancestors. A train station for Xi’an can be piece of stone, like a brick pulled from out of the city walls. A building of no time period may converse with the dynasties of the past and the citizens of the present. A place where time will reverberate consistent echoes, one that can be understood by our ancestors; a monument for the landscape, a destination for the departed, and a dialogue with the past.

Grids and movement

The intersection of grids become an extension from the agricultural context currently surrounding the site meeting against the grid of the directional tracks. The building finds multiple grids in different axes as it tilts the natural act of stone meeting earth.

Program and structure

The main building offers an interlaced office, cowork spaces and hotel programs blend into one another like a vertical landscape.

The structural system lends itself to a large truss network, which allows for the building to bridge from either side of the train tracks. This creates a unison throughout the site as the office, hotel float above the locomotives, while shops are lowered in the void boulevard courtyard. The characteristic programs exist above and below the tracks simultaneously.

Menhir - Xian train station, at Xi´an, China, by Claudio C. Araya 11

Facade

The façade remains a humble reminiscence of the stones of the past, like a symbol notating a mark of destination.

Projects Facts –

Location: Xi’an, China

GPS Coordinates: 34.16576219620962,108.55053679668669

Client: YAC srl  in collaboration with Manni

Authors: Claudio C. Araya, Yahya Abdullah, Chenhao Ma, Yutan Sun

Design Year: 2020

Area: unknown

Status: Honorable mention, Cultural, infrastructure

Share your comments

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Recent

Diwan-i-Khas at Fatehpur Sikri. Image by Manfred Sommer

“If the received wisdom of this Western historiography is Eurocentric and subjective, how do we trace the evolution of architectural consciousness in India?”—Jaimini Mehta

The essay is the second of a three-part series of preview essays for Jaimini Mehta’s forthcoming book, Sense of Itihasa; Architecture and History in Modern India. He explores how colonial perspectives distorted Indian architectural history, arguing that indigenous architectural theories existed beyond Eurocentric interpretations, with the mandala symbolizing a deeper conceptual understanding of cosmic and spatial design.

Read More »
Jaimini Mehta - Architecture and History

“Unless you ask these questions, you will not realise that it is not history but the perception of history that needs to be revisited.”—Jaimini Mehta

The essay is the first of a three-part series of preview essays for Jaimini Mehta’s forthcoming book, Sense of Itihasa; Architecture and History in Modern India.
The book analyses the works of several contemporary, post-independence Indian architects to demonstrate that since independence, they have revitalized traditional architectural elements and techniques, drawing inspiration from India’s itihasa.

Read More »

Featured Publications

We Are Hiring