Saturday, January 18, 2020

Aimer Fashion Factory | Crossboundaries

Aimer Fashion Factory | Crossboundaries

Aimer Fashion Factory

When Aimer first approached Crossboundaries in 2004, it requested a factory compound of 14000 sqm gross floor area that could house conventional storage, manufacturing, and a 300-people dormitory by individual functions. However, as Aimer grew rapidly in China, the leadership quickly foresaw the importance to upgrade its operation shifting from a production-focused business to a genuine fashion brand. In order to reinforce its brand image and adapt to a maturing economy, Crossboundaries was asked to add a Research and Development office, a 23000 sqm distribution center as well as spaces to showcase its products.

Courtesy of Crossboundaries – Photography: Xia Zhi and Yang Chaoying

The realized facility of 53000 sqm in 2014 represents a successful collaboration between Aimer and the designers in rethinking the future of the Chinese brand that integrates production, brand building with the well-being of employees.

Courtesy of Crossboundaries – Photography: Xia Zhi and Yang Chaoying

Unity: A facility that reflects the strength of a leading enterprise
To optimize the site, Crossboundaries gathered all business functions under one roof, resulted in a rectangular stand-alone building that presents strength and authority to the public.

Courtesy of Crossboundaries – Photography: Xia Zhi and Yang Chaoying

Following the idea to boost Aimer’s operational efficiency in order to move up the value chain, Crossboundaries responded with detail research and understanding of how Aimers goods, employees and visitors navigate within and between the spaces. The west public entry into the 12m high lobby invites visitors to the southwest corner of shop and Aimer museum as well as the ground floor conference center that will host industry events. Above the conference center and the lobby is the office area, which shares a communal deck with the manufacturing areas, cutting down in-house communication time between administration and production.

Courtesy of Crossboundaries – Photography: Xia Zhi and Yang Chaoying

Not only does the complex serve conventional factory needs in a modern way, but it also creates a factory community based on the communist system of a “danwei”. “Even though Aimer is upgrading its operation to meet the international business standard, it still provides accommodation as part of the compensation for the workers based on the communist idea of ‘danwei’,” said principal Binke Lenhardt. The 600-people dormitory separates from the facility with recreational areas in between, generating a distinction between work and living, therefore, enhancing the sense of community for workers.

Courtesy of Crossboundaries – Photography: Xia Zhi and Yang Chaoying

Democratizing: Attending the well-being and interaction of employees
While it is important to the client to present a strong image, Crossboundaries envisioned a factory environment that attends to the well-being of workers and administration employees equally.

Courtesy of Crossboundaries – Photography: Xia Zhi and Yang Chaoying

By cutting a void in the building and placing a communal deck set at level +13m, the doubled public space crossing ground floor, and the deck allows air to better circulate horizontally and vertically along the curved inner facade. The use of top-hinged glass windows along the inner facade maximize the amount of natural light that shines in both manufacturing and office areas. This timbered deck, therefore, serves as a bridge to bring administration and workers to stroll and relax in the same place. “We have to break away from the imprisoning working environment, moving from disciplining workers to engaging communication and breathing within the factories,” said principal Hao Dong.

Although the industrial nature of the facility is addressed with galvanized aluminum and concrete on the outer and inner façade respectively, the aluminum panels were designed with vertical fins and concrete panels prefabricated in order to enliven a flattened cube with tactility. The outer facade transitions from aluminum coverage to a combination of aluminum and glass, accommodating the different levels of lighting required in products-centered areas and human-centered areas. The visual effect of the facade, therefore, reflects the nature of lingerie: coverage and transparency.

Courtesy of Crossboundaries – Photography: Xia Zhi and Yang Chaoying

The staircase in the lobby winds around a veil of slender white columns set at various inclinations screening off the shop and museum. It also doubles as a descending catwalk for models to reveal a new collection of lingerie, emerging from behind the veil to the audience in the lobby. This sense of exploration and mystery is frequently echoed in lighting, walkways, and voids with curves and rounded quadrilateral patterns, which were extracted abstractly from selections of lace.

Diagram 4 – Courtesy of Crossboundaries

Project Info
Architects: Crossboundaries
Location:  Beijing, China
Area: 53000.0 sqm
Interior Design: Crossboundaries Architects
Landscape Architect: Crossboundaries Architects
Collaborating Architects & Engineers: BIAD International Studio & BIAD TSH International Studio
Year: 2014
Type: Factory
Photographs: Zhi Xia, Chaoyang Ying

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