Shanghai-South Station / AREP


Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP
  • Architects: AREP
  • Location: Shanghai, China
  • Design Team: Jean-Marie Duthilleul, Etienne Tricaud and ECADI Associés (East China Architectural Design and Research Institute)
  • Client: Ministry of the Chinese Railways for the station, City of Shanghai fort the urban layout and infrastructure
  • Project Year: 2006

Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP

Text description provided by the architects. An international competition for the Shanghai-South station took place from May to September 2001, over 3 different phases. AREP and ECADI won this competition jointly.


Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP

With its design, the Shanghai South station goes beyond the traditional function of the railway station as a mere exchange hub, to become an active participant in the role of Shanghai as an economic, financial, cultural and creative world class city.


Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP

A destination in itself, the station provides travellers and visitors alike many services as well as prestigious retail spaces.


Roof Plan

Roof Plan

Its circular form allows for a simple and straightforward operational mode: it provides good circulation conditions to vehicles, and it offers travellers the most direct and logic way to waiting rooms and platforms. The slight difference of level between the different services and retail spaces located on level 9.90 m and the waiting rooms on level 7.50 m, creates a large amphitheatre-like open space from which all the station is visible, and all functions and circulation patterns are understood, from cars drop-off to trains.


Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP

The most striking architectural element is the 255 m diameter roof, which, despite an area of 60 000 m², still remains a light, slender and elegant element of the project. It is composed of three different layers: the external sun breakers, the transparent polycarbonate surface and the internal perforated metal skin.  The combination of those three layers filters and diffuses natural light throughout the space.


Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP

The lighting principles of the station constitute an essential design element.  Light poles are distributed evenly over the station according to a rigorous and precise grid, in order to obtain a homogeneous light. The use of concealed lighting, lamps trained directly on the under-face of slabs and roofs, guarantees that the station remains a bright beacon at night. Directional lighting is used in order to put a strong emphasis on the roof structure and gives it its full architectural expression.


Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP

Using materials such as glass (transparent or pattern printed), transparent polycarbonate elements, perforated steel or brushed aluminium to achieve a play of transparency, gives the station both lightness and a modern expression.


Section 01

Section 01

Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP

Section 02

Section 02

Urban, regional, as well as long distance means of transportation all converge towards Shanghai-South station, which in turn becomes more than a simple hub, and fully assumes its role as the City of Shanghai South Gate.


Courtesy of AREP

Courtesy of AREP