I was contracted through Hamilton Anderson Associates in Detroit to collaborate with the architectural design firm located on the Hefei University campus on a variety of designs, including a university campus, office buildings, and an entire city district. It would have been a bit intimidating to go alone, but I was meeting a colleague with whom I had worked on the Mandarin Oriental Hotel project in Las Vegas. One of our goals was to bring more projects to the Detroit office as well as establish Hamilton-Anderson as an international architectural firm. The HFUT design institute was also working to increase its clout as an architectural design firm in China by gaining new ideas and insight from American designers and architects. They were particularly interested in our expertise with master planning design and building design.
The master plan posted below is based on designs my colleague and I developed and presented to the design institute. This design was for a 20,000+ student campus located in the Anhui province of China. Interestingly enough, the requirements included large pedestrian and vehicular pathways, but very little surface parking (because the Chinese seem to park wherever they want). Green nature areas are also very important, even though from my experience of visiting several Chinese campuses in the region, those spaces are rarely used. Another curious building design requirement for most of the buildings was a height maximum of 5-6 stories, which allowed Chinese builders to typically not include an elevator in the building. So even though they were housing thousands of students, and could have done so more efficiently with fewer but taller buildings, the buildings were kept at lower heights to save cost on maintenance and elevators.
An interesting side note regarding the building height based on personal experience while there. The building I was living in was newer and 11 stories, and we lived on the 11th floor. Halfway through my stay we had a torrential downpour during the day and when we got back to our building, the parking level, probably about 1.5 meters below grade was full of water. As luck would have it that is also where the power for the elevators, water, and the whole building was located…you can probably see where this is headed. We had to walk up and down 11 stories for a week in the stifling hot Chinese summer while the water was pumped out and electricity restored. From this perspective, a six story building can make sense in some cases by creating less maintenance for a university or property owner to worry about.
Working with the architects in China was a wonderful experience, and the colleagues I made there, helped me learn a new way of looking at architecture and design. I learned how difficult international correspondence and coordination can be, but also how efficient certain things can become with two offices working in different time zones. This is the kind of experience I could not have gotten anywhere else.
I’ve posted a few samples of the campus master plan I designed and developed while in China. The renderings below were done by a consultant based off Sketchup and AutoCAD models we sent them.








