Grand Theater Urbanism , 1st ed. 2019
Chinese Cities in the 21st century

Coordinator: Xue Charlie Qiuli

Language: English

Approximative price 137.14 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Grand Theater Urbanism
Publication date:
277 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Paperback

Approximative price 137.14 €

In Print (Delivery period: 15 days).

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Grand Theater Urbanism
Publication date:
277 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
This volume explores the phenomenon and trend of cultural buildings by investigating 10 typical cities in China from the first, second, and third tiers, and from the Chinese diaspora. Each grand theater design was the result of a high-profile international competition and created by global architects in collaboration with Chinese design institutes. The national and international significance of these iconic projects lies in the fact that they not only reflect the dynamics of global design ideas, but also represent a particular historical moment in China?s modernization process. The development, histories, and purposes of constructing cultural buildings are carefully outlined and colorfully presented. Given China?s tremendous population, the development trajectory of its urban construction will provide insights for other regions that hope to embark on the high-speed track in the 21st century.


?In 'Grand Theater Urbanism',  Professor Charlie Xue and his team document China?s current shift towards a culture of consumption and leisure, symbolized by the construction of multi-use Grand Theaters in major cities. 'Grand Theater Urbanism' reveals the unexpected variety and complexity of this contemporary cultural drive in a series of exemplary chapters with highly detailed, local, case studies.?

                    --Professor David Grahame Shane, Columbia University, New York 

"Jane Jacobs likened city life to a performance. This book goes a stage further and analyses the actual performance spaces within cities in China. In doing so it makes a valuable connection between urban design and the cultural life in cities. This is an important and often forgotten dimension of urbanism and I heartily commend this book to readers.'"

                    --Professor Matthew Carmona, The Bartlett, University College London
Preface and acknowledgments.- Introduction: City Branding and Cultural Facilities—boosting Chinese cities .- Development of Theaters and the City in Beijing: the 1950s and After the 1980s.- To Be Cultural Capital—grand theaters in Shanghai.- Guangzhou Opera House: Building a Gated Public Space.- City Center Shifting and Cultural Facilities - Performance Space in Shenzhen.- Growing with the City: Theatrical Buildings in Chongqing.- The Henan Art Center: From Dilemma to Ambition.- The Shanxi Grand Theater: “Renaissance” of Chinese Drama Land.- A Butterfly by the Lake – Wuxi Grand Theater.- The National Taichung Theater: experimenting publicity of metropolitan urbanism.- From Colonial to Global—performance space in Hong Kong.- Appendix.- Bibliography.- Index.
Dr. Charlie Q. L. Xue has taught architecture at Shanghai Jiaotong University; the University of Texas, USA; and City University of Hong Kong. An award-winning architect and writer, he has published 12 books, including Building a Revolution: Chinese Architecture since 1980 (HKU Press, 2006), Hong Kong Architecture 1945-2015: From Colonial to Global (Springer, 2016), and A History of Design Institutes in China (with Guanghui Ding, Routledge, 2018), and research papers in international refereed journals such as The Journal of Architecture, Urban Design International, Habitat International, and Cities. Xue’s research focuses on modern architecture in China and design strategies for high-density environments.

Investigates selected cities and shares first-hand reports on urban construction in China

Details cities’ growth and explores how cultural buildings have contributed to quality of life

Focuses on the theaters’ relationship with cities instead of going deeper into theatrical and technical design

Provides building plans and associated descriptions, making it unique and highly readable

Relevant to UN Sustainable Development Goal 11 --Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable