Last chance: The 14th Architizer A+Awards celebrates architecture's new era of craft. Apply for publication online and in print by submitting your projects before the Final Entry Deadline on January 30th!
Once a small fishing village on the Pearl River Delta, Shenzhen has transformed into one of the world’s most innovative urban laboratories — a city where architecture operates at an almost unimaginable scale and speed. As China’s first Special Economic Zone, it became a testing ground for modern urbanization and technology-driven growth, evolving into a metropolis of more than 17 million residents in just four decades. Today, it anchors the Greater Bay Area — a vast economic and cultural hub linking Hong Kong, Macau, Zhuhai, Guangzhou and other southern Chinese cities — where the boundaries between architecture, infrastructure, and landscape are continually redrawn.
The city’s built environment reflects a remarkable range — from monumental cultural centers and elevated parks to delicate timber bridges and community-scale projects that reinterpret tradition for a new generation. For architects visiting Shenzhen, the experience extends far beyond the city limits. The Greater Bay Area offers access to some of China’s most compelling architectural works, from parametric airport terminals and ecological waterfronts to adaptive reuse projects that revive industrial heritage.
This guide highlights must-see landmarks across Shenzhen and its neighboring cities, offering insight into the spatial strategies and material realities driving one of the most dynamic architectural regions in the world.
Hengqin Culture and Art Complex
By Yunchao Xu Atelier Apeiron, Xiangzhou, Zhuhai, China
Jury Winner, Gallery & Exhibition Space | Finalist, Cultural & Expo Center, Architecture +Glass, 13th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: A curved skyline and cascading green terraces host rooftop gardens and event platforms, while the operable skylight system and rainwater-harvesting roofs exemplify a climate-responsive approach to large-scale civic design.
Overland’s Headquarters Showroom for the New Earthism Series
By AD ARCHITECTURE, Foshan, China
Jury Winner, Architecture +Branding, 13th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Cross-shaped display structures frame the products as sculptural focal points, while diffused light, mirrored floors, and rhythmic symmetry evoke the interplay between earth, architecture, and perception.
The Vessel of Light and Nature —Public Toilet at Shenzhen Garden Expo Park
By REFORM, Shenzhen, China
Special Mention, Government & Civic Buildings, 13th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Each wall subtly shifts to preserve mature trees, while skylights and open joints promote natural airflow and daylighting — an elegant model for Shenzhen’s ongoing “Toilet Revolution.”
Qiaochengbei Park Visitor Center
By Atelier XI, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Architecture +Metal, 13th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Clad in weathering steel and shaded by perforated louvers, the naturally ventilated buildings employ passive cooling, green roofs, and earth sheltering to harmonize architecture and ecology.
Pavilion of Pastel Shadows at the Shiyaling Park
By Studio 10, Shenzhen, China
Special Mention, Pavilions, 13th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The pastel-toned façades and perforated roofs reinterpret the shifting shadows of the forest, blending art and ecology while maintaining the delicate balance between structure and landscape.
FW JI·Covered Bridge on Aqueduct
By IARA, Huangshan, China
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Small Projects, 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The bridge’s X-frame structure is built from prefabricated cross-laminated timber (CLT), assembled entirely by hand without heavy machinery, merging traditional craftsmanship with contemporary sustainable engineering.
Marisfrolg Fashion Campus
By Architecture van Brandenburg, Shenzhen, China
Popular Choice Winner, Mixed Use (L>25,000 sq ft), 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Constructed over 14 years, the headquarters incorporates 80% recycled materials in its exterior cladding, including discarded ceramics, marble offcuts, recycled brick and glass slag.
Marisfrolg Showroom
By Zaha Hadid Architects, Shenzhen, China
Special Mention, Showrooms, 13th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Floors of crushed glass and quartz and GRG walls molded from recyclable wax highlight ZHA’s commitment to craft, and a nod towards circular design.
Jiulongfeng Children’s Learning Center for Conservation
By LUO studio, Huangshan, China
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Joy, 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Traditional mortise-and-tenon carpentry techniques were preserved throughout the renovation, ensuring that each joint, beam, and roof form expresses the craft of Huizhou’s architectural heritage.
New Life for Old Village – Huizhou Lanmen Village Renovation Project
By REDe Architects, Huizhou, China
Popular Choice Winner, Architecture +Renovation, 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Adaptive reuse merges with passive design — reused masonry and solar roofs reduce embodied energy while maintaining the tactile authenticity of the village’s heritage fabric.
Zhuhai Jinwan Civic Art Centre
By Zaha Hadid Architects, Zhuhai, China
Finalist, Cultural & Expo Centers, 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The soaring roof canopy, composed of modular steel shells supported by just 22 columns, unifies the distinct cultural venues in a single fluid composition.
Shenzhen Metro Line 16
By Vantree Design, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Transportation Interiors, 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Inspired by Hakka dwellings, vaulted canopies and warm, earth-toned materials evoke communal courtyards, making each station both a transit hub and a civic sanctuary.
Kingway Brewery Renovation
By URBANUS, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Architecture +Adaptive Reuse, 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The renovation preserves 33 stainless steel fermentation tanks, transforming them into sculptural elements framing auditoriums, bars and rooftop theaters — a powerful expression of Shenzhen’s evolving urban identity.
Shenzhen Reef Library
By Wildurban Architects, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Libraries, 12th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The red volcanic stone used throughout the structure roots the project in Dapeng Peninsula’s geology.
Shenzhen Lotus Water Culture Base: Landscape Design for Honghu Park Water Purification Station
By NODE Architecture & Urbanism, Shenzhen, China
Jury Winner, Public Parks & Green Space, 11th A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The project pioneers the “publicization of infrastructure,” fusing buried purification systems with public space to reveal water’s essential role in Shenzhen’s urban life.
Qianhai’s Guiwan Park
By Field Operations, Shenzhen, China
Jury Winner, Architecture +Urban Transformation | Finalist, Public Parks & Green Space, 11th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The park integrates 12.6 acres (5.1 hectares) of mangroves and 4.4 acres (1.8 hectares) of freshwater wetlands, turning flood resilience into a daily, walkable experience of nature in the city.
OCT Bao’an OH BAY
By LAGUARDA.LOW ARCHITECTS, Shenzhen, China
Popular Choice Winner, Urban & Masterplan, 11th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The park’s design integrates advanced stormwater filtration and renewable energy systems, positioning landscape infrastructure as both a civic amenity and a model for sustainable urban growth.
B3
By RooMoo Design Studio, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Restaurants (S<1000 sq ft), 11th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Each stainless-steel “wave” references one of the brand’s three namesakes — brunch, bistro, bar — fusing temporal metaphor with material craft to create a dining environment that evolves over time.
The Water Drop Library
By He Wei Studio/3andwich Design, Huizhou, China
Special Mention, Libraries, 11th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The circular roof pool creates a meditative “inverted sea,” allowing visitors to walk on water while glimpsing the real shoreline beyond — a poetic dialogue between architecture and landscape.
Intercity Bar
By Vermilion Zhou Design Group, Shenzhen, China
Special Mention, Bars & Wineries, 11th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Three curved glulam beams, each spanning 82 feet (25 meters), form the bridge’s primary structure — a modern reinterpretation of ancient covered bridges designed to keep timber dry and endure the subtropical rains of the Pearl River Delta.
Timber Bridge in Gulou Waterfront
By LUO studio, Jiangmen, China
Jury Winner, Architecture +Wood, 10th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Three curved glulam beams, each spanning 82 feet (25 meters), form the bridge’s primary structure — a modern reinterpretation of ancient covered bridges designed to keep timber dry and endure the subtropical rains of the Pearl River Delta.
Yantian 19.5km Waterfront Boardwalk
By eLandscript, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Urban & Masterplan, 10th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Elevated pathways and adaptive landscape detailing mitigate storm surges, transforming disaster recovery into a model of coastal resilience and urban renewal.
‘Towards Nature, Towards You’ XLXN Lifestyle Art Space
By XIANGLIN, Guangzhou, China
Special Mention, Gallery & Exhibition Spaces, 10th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The arches vary in height and span to frame different sensory experiences — a spatial rhythm echoing the meandering waterways of Panyu’s historic landscape.
He Art Museum
By Tadao Ando Architect & Associates, Foshan, China
Popular Choice Winner, Museum; Finalist, Architecture +Concrete, Architecture +Stairs, 9th Architizer A+Awards | Finalist, Museum, Architecture +Stairs, 8th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Each of the staircase’s 45 steps differs subtly in width and form, a feat of precision casting that transforms concrete into a meditative choreography of movement and craft.
Nankun Mystery Village Art restaurant
By Wildurban Architects, Guangzhou, China
Finalist, Restaurants (L>1,000 sq ft), 9th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Elevated slightly above the ground plane, the building’s glass-and-timber volume mirrors the surrounding canopy, creating the sensation of floating within the forest.
YAO Concept Restaurant
By AAN Architects, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Restaurants (S<1000 sq ft), 9th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Crafted from flowing fiberglass panels, the “net” merges lighting, structure and sculpture — a single continuous surface that turns spatial separation into a performance of connection.
Longgang Slow-Traffic System: Nine Rising City Bridges
By FCHA, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Transportation Infrastructure, 9th Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: Each bridge type adapts its form to site conditions — some spiraling around intersections, others gliding above plazas — all sharing a continuous steel logic inspired by the dragon’s sinuous movement.
UABB Longgang Exhibition Hall
By Atelier XI, Shenzhen, China
Finalist, Pop Ups & Temporary | Finalist, Architecture +Light, 9th Architizer A+Awards
Photo by Chao Zhang
Commissioned just three months before opening, this adaptive reuse project transformed a vast, disused air-conditioner factory into a luminous exhibition space chronicling Shenzhen’s urban growth. A 820-foot (250-meter) translucent membrane wall — conceived as a “Folded Time-Light-Line” — cuts through the industrial hall, creating a glowing chronological promenade that bridges the city’s manufacturing past with its cultural present.
Architect’s Detail: Made from affordable tensile membrane material, the light wall was fabricated and installed in under 20 days, its diaphanous surface turning the relics of industry into a living canvas of illumination.
Financial City Community Center
By Lacime Architect, Suzhou, China
Finalist, Architecture +Community, 8th Architizer A+Awards
Photo by Schran Images
Set beside the Suzhou Canal, this cultural landmark reinterprets the city’s poetic garden tradition through a contemporary lens, transforming the Taihu stone into architecture. Its twisting steel structure and layered façades evoke the misty abstraction of Jiangnan landscapes, creating a civic space that blurs boundaries between past and present, solid and void.
Architect’s Detail: The double-skin façade — a parametric lattice suspended before the curtain wall — filters daylight like silk, recalling Suzhou’s heritage of weaving and water.
Shenzhen Bao’an International Airport, Terminal 3
By Massimiliano and Doriana Fuksas, Shenzhen, China
Jury & Popular Choice Winner, Airports, 2nd Architizer A+Awards
Architect’s Detail: The terminal’s stainless-steel “trees” serve as both air diffusers and visual anchors, transforming essential infrastructure into monumental interior sculpture that channels the logic of natural forms.
Last chance: The 14th Architizer A+Awards celebrates architecture's new era of craft. Apply for publication online and in print by submitting your projects before the Final Entry Deadline on January 30th!