The Island | MVRDV

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The Island | MVRDV

Information

  • Project Name: The Island
  • Practice: MVRDV
  • Gross Built up Area: 9000 sqm
  • Project Location: Taichung City
  • Country: Taiwan
  • Lead Architects/Designer: Jacob van Rijs, Gideon Maasland, Hui Hsin Liao
  • Design Team: Laura Petroncini, Mark van Wasbeek, Herng Tzou, Veronica della Ventura, Piotr Janus, Francesca Cambi, Olly Veugelers, Lorenzo Mennuti, Joyce de Louw, Nicola Panico
  • Clients: Cheering Zu
  • Structural Consultants: Dayan Engineering Consultant
  • MEP Consultants: Songlin Engineering Consultant
  • Landscape Consultants: Ele-Garden Landscape Design
  • Others: Visualisation: Antonio Luca Coco, Luana La Martina, Angelo La Delfa, Lorenzo D' Alessandro, Ciprian Buzdugan, Stefano Fiaschi; Teresa Papachristou (Graphic Design), Copyright: MVRDV Winy Maas, Jacob van Rijs, Nathalie de Vries, Co-architect: Sd-Haus, Taichung City, Taiwan, Lighting Consultant: LHLD Lighting Design
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Excerpt: The Island by MVRDV is designed as a green oasis within Taichung’s dense urban fabric, bringing nature and communal life back to the city. The residential tower combines abundant greenery, shared spaces, and an organic expression, using soft curves, planted balconies, and a Gaudí-inspired ceramic mosaic façade to give a standardized layout a softer, more liveable, and nature-driven character.

Project Description

The Island | MVRDV
© MVRDV

[Text as submitted by architect] MVRDV has received construction permission for “The Island”, a 21-storey residential tower in Taichung, Taiwan. The design focuses on bringing greenery and nature to the city, as well as providing communal spaces for maximum liveability. Taking a cue from these ambitions, the tower takes on an organic expression: its many balconies and planters, as well as the building’s edges and openings, are defined by their soft curves, while the façade is finished in a mosaic of irregular ceramic tiling inspired by the work of Antoni Gaudí.

The Island | MVRDV
Site Plan © MVRDV
The Island | MVRDV
© MVRDV

The project features 76 apartments for sale above two floors featuring commercial spaces and a communal dining room, lounge, and karaoke space. With the development aimed at middle- class residents and especially young couples, communal areas are a significant focus of the design, with a large variety of shared outdoor spaces. 

The roof features a shared garden terrace, surrounding a layered green crown that hosts a multi-functional shared space for residents’ use. Five communal balconies are distributed among the building’s 21 floors, with each one carving a three-storey indent into the building’s façade to create a feeling of spaciousness.

The Island | MVRDV
Balcony Catalogue © MVRDV
The Island | MVRDV
© MVRDV

The Island is a response to Taichung’s liveable building regulations, which incentivise an increase in outdoor space and greenery. Located at the border between Taichung’s North District and Beitun District, until the 21st century the site was close to the edge of the city; today, following a wave of urbanisation in Beitun District, it finds itself at the heart of a densely packed commercial neighbourhood.

To counteract this condition, the project creates an oasis of greenery within the city. In addition to the aforementioned rooftop and communal balconies, the design introduces street-level planting, 104 private balconies with planted areas, and 38 standalone façade planters, complete with a selection of plants that reflects the diversity of nature in the whole of Taichung province.

The Island | MVRDV
Floor Plans © MVRDV
The Island | MVRDV
Eleventh Floor Plan © MVRDV
The Island | MVRDV
© MVRDV

In addition to the project’s biodiversity goals, sustainability is also a goal in the context of carbon emissions. Currently the site is home to a 13-storey commercial and office building that was built before the country’s most recent earthquake-related building regulations, and therefore has to be demolished. Instead of discarding this material as waste, the construction of The Island will reuse materials where possible, for example by saving the stone from the existing building’s walls and floors to be reused as a floor finish in the new building.

To emphasise the project’s dedication to bringing nature back to the city, its greenery is complemented by the organic curves throughout the design, made possible by the ceramic façade. Using a mosaic of small irregular shapes, the tiles can be adapted to every curve, in a technique best known from the work of Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí. Using a variety of different shades of white, larger pieces are used on the flat areas and a smaller, more granular pattern gives a smooth finish to the tighter curves. This technique not only provides a high- quality finish but also one that is easy to maintain.

The Island | MVRDV
© MVRDV

“The design of The Island brings a soft touch in a city full of boxes”, says MVRDV founding partner Jacob van Rijs. “As with other residential buildings in Taiwan, the building’s underlying layout had to follow a fairly standardised and highly efficient approach. The building’s character therefore has to come from its details, from the soft curves, from the Gaudí-inspired façade finish, and from the way greenery is integrated as if the building is part of the same organic system.”

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