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Taikoo Li Sanlitun

Coordinates: 39°56′01″N 116°26′53″E / 39.933536°N 116.448053°E / 39.933536; 116.448053
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Taikoo Li Sanlitun
Taikoo Li Sanlitun
Map
LocationSanlitun, Beijing
Address19 Sanlitun Road, Chaoyang District
Opening date2008
DeveloperSwire Properties
ArchitectKengo Kuma
No. of stores and services240
Total retail floor area1,296,000 sq ft (120,400 m2)
Websitewww.taikoolisanlitun.com/en

Taikoo Li Sanlitun (Chinese: 三里屯太古里; pinyin: Sānlǐtún Tàigǔlǐ), formerly Sanlitun Village, is a shopping center in the Sanlitun area of the Chaoyang District in Beijing, China. It comprises 19 buildings on two sites that are a few minutes walk from each other. Besides retail space, the project includes a 99-room boutique hotel, The Opposite House (瑜舍).

Location

Taikoo Li Sanlitun is adjacent to Beijing Subway Line 2 Dongsi Shitiao Station and Line 10 Tuanjiehu Station. Dongdaqiao Station on Line 6 is also close by. It is a ten-minute walk from Tuanjiehu, a twenty-minute walk from Dongsi Shitiao and a twenty-minute walk from Dongdaqiao. It is recommended to take Exit A or D from Tuanjiehu.

History and construction

The center opened in July 2008, and is developed and managed by Hong Kong-based Swire Properties (Taikoo Properties). It comprise two sites:[1]

The Piazza (Taikoo Li South)

The center opened in July 2008, and contains 260+ stores, dining outlets and services including a multi-screen theatre.

The Deck (Taikoo Li North)

The area includes a large number of stores, especially fashion brands. It also includes art galleries focusing on avant-garde and contemporary Chinese and foreign artists.[2][3][4]

Design

It was designed by a group led by the Oval partnership from Hong Kong, and Japanese architect Kengo Kuma (隈 研吾).[5][6]

The design of Taikoo Li South is inspired by Beijing's hutongs, while Taikoo Li North draws its courtyard form from China's siheyuan.[5] The space also includes modern pieces such as an open fountain and little touches from contemporary artists.[7][8]

References

  1. ^ "Design Concept".
  2. ^ About Sanlitun Village
  3. ^ http://news.baidu.com/ns?cl=2&rn=20&tn=news&word=%C8%FD%C0%EF%CD%CDVillage (in Chinese)
  4. ^ http://www.ce.cn/culture/whcyk/gundong/201110/25/t20111025_22785967.shtml (in Chinese)
  5. ^ a b "Design Concept".
  6. ^ "Design and Architecture".
  7. ^ http://news.163.com/11/0224/01/6TKCEGT100014AED.html in Chinese
  8. ^ http://news.house365.com/gbk/hfestate/system/2011/12/07/020204014.html (in Chinese)

39°56′01″N 116°26′53″E / 39.933536°N 116.448053°E / 39.933536; 116.448053