URBN Hotel, Shanghai

Published by
jesse
August 25, 2010

China’s first carbon neutral hotel has many green claims to its name, and has also adopted a local approach, offering an authentic experience inspired by traditional China. Text by Julie Martin.

Think ‘green building’ and for most of us Shanghai does not come immediately to mind.

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This centrepiece of the world’s fastest-growing economy has grown from humble beginnings as a fishing and textiles township to become the world’s largest cargo port – a title it claimed in 2005 – and a city with a population to rival Australia’s.

Economic reforms in the early 1990s precipitated a building boom that defines today’s city skyline – a silhouette of Jetson-esque skyscrapers topped with flying saucer observation decks – and continues still in what Australian developer Jules Kwan (founding partner of Space Development) calls a “build it as fast as you can and as cheap as you can” mentality.

Pioneering Shanghai’s movement towards sustainable building, Space Development set out with Shanghai-based Canadian architects, A00 to turn a former prosthetics factory then post office into a 26-room sustainably-built boutique retreat that trumped all expectations by claiming the title of China’s first carbon neutral hotel, among numerous other accolades, in its first year of operation.

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“The driving force behind the URBN Hotel was to build something that captured a uniquely Shanghai experience,” says Kwan, “and to do it in a way that was least damaging to the environment. We went carbon neutral as part of our evolving sustainable philosophy. It was not a trophy we set out to acquire.”

For the full text turn to page 218 of Indesign #42 on newsstands now.

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Photography by Hans Schlupp