Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - I.m. Pei's design works

I.m. Pei's design works

I.M. Pei's design works include the Louvre Glass Pyramid, Islamic Art Museum, Meixiu Art Museum, Suzhou Museum and Bank of China Building.

1, Louvre glass pyramid

The Louvre pyramid is a huge pyramid made of glass and metal, surrounded by three smaller pyramids.

2. Museum of Islamic Art

This museum was successfully opened in 2008, and I.M. Pei said that this Islamic art museum will be his last large-scale cultural building.

Belau's goal is to integrate long-standing values into today's culture, or, as he said, to grasp the "essence of Islamic architecture".

3. Meixiu Art Museum?

Meixiu Museum is a cooperative project between Japan and the United States. Architects I.M. Pei and Kibokan International Company built it on the hillside of Nagasaki near Shiga Natural Scenic Area in Japan in August 1996.

The details of the museum reflect the designer's innovative efforts, hoping to break away from convention. The inclined glass curtain wall forms a space frame with novel appearance. The materials used inside are very warm, especially Magny Doré granite and colored concrete, and the exhibitions and works of art are preserved in the best conditions.

4. Suzhou Museum

The inspiration of the building comes from the traditional landscape of Suzhou, and the museum is placed between courtyards to make the building in harmony with its surrounding environment. The new museum and the Humble Administrator's Garden borrowed scenery from each other and reflected each other, which became the modernization continuation of the famous Humble Administrator's Garden.

In the structure of the building, the glass fiber reinforced plastic structure allows modern people to borrow large-area skylights indoors, and the open steel structure replaces the wooden materials of traditional buildings. The design of roof modeling has broken through the constraints of traditional building "big roof" in China in lighting.

5. Bank of China Building, Hong Kong

Bank of China Tower is the headquarters building of Bank of China in Hongkong. The original site is Murray Building, which is located in the economic and financial core of Central District.

The planning and design of the Bank of China Building began at the end of 1982, began in April of 1985 and was completed in 1989. The base covers an area of about 8,400 square meters, with a total construction area of129,000 square meters, 70 floors above ground, and a building height of 3 15 meters, plus the height of the top two telephone poles. The building looks like bamboo, symbolizing strength, vitality, firmness and enterprising spirit. The granite exterior wall on the pedestal represents the Great Wall and China.