With the core vision of “Borderless Nature,” this project pioneers a next-generation office campus that seamlessly fuses urban fabric, ecological systems, and digital innovation. Designed through a multidimensional lens—visual experience, circulation, security, energy efficiency, and long-term sustainability—it fosters a symbiotic relationship between people, architecture, and nature.
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Gold 🏆 Winner
Global Future Design Awards 2025
Ant Group Headquarters Phase II, Hangzhou
Corporate Interior (Under Construction)
Firm
Matrix Design
Architect/Designer
Liu Jianhui
Design Team
Zhao Jingcheng, Yue Qunyang, Chen Siyi, Hu Jianing, Li Ruiwen, Lu Chenglin, Chen Beilin, Wang Junjie, Chen Chuanlin, Huang Zhijun
Location
Shenzhen
Country
China
Photographer/Copyright
©Matrix Design
Website
N/A
Instagram
N/A
Facebook
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Whatsapp
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The Visitor Center serves as a dynamic brand gateway. Its transparent façade and fluid form embody the spirit of accessible technology. Spanning two levels, the center merges corporate exhibition and business hospitality. Security system ensures seamless operations. The ground floor hosts a public restaurant and presentation hall, while the upper floors house VIP lounges and training areas. A central atrium connects all spaces, with interactive digital features enhancing user engagement and cultivating a sense of community, reflecting the inclusive values of our time.
The Ant Green Corridor reinvents the traditional connective spine of the campus. Through a layered ecological system—comprising a shaded terrace, nature platform, and observation deck—it reshapes spatial logic vertically. Elevation is carefully managed to separate fast-paced commuting routes from leisure paths, stitching together eight office “islands” through a continuous green ribbon. A multi-sensory signage system deepens the immersive experience, while a widened northern entry plaza buffers and orchestrates pedestrian flow. The stair-stepped landscape elements are infused with thoughtful human-centric design, becoming both a social connector and a transition between work and support zones.
Each Office Island integrates workstations, meeting rooms, and training hubs through modular layouts that adapt fluidly to evolving needs. Circulation paths are optimized for productivity, while demountable furniture systems support agile reconfiguration—reducing waste and enhancing spatial flexibility. Green principles extend from material selection to energy infrastructure, utilizing natural lighting and passive ventilation to create a low-carbon, high-comfort work environment—an adaptable prototype for the future of office life.
At the heart of the campus, the Energy Tower Sports Center and Food Bay Restaurant form twin anchors of wellness and vitality. The fitness hub opens to scenic tea hill views through transparent glazing, blurring boundaries between indoor activity and the natural world. The restaurant adopts an all-glass façade with semi-outdoor dining areas, creating a fluid relationship with the landscape. Together, these facilities transform everyday routines into a continuous dialogue with nature—boosting well-being and strengthening the social fabric of the workplace.
The project redefines the workplace ecosystem across five key dimensions:
- Blending indoor and outdoor realms through visual openness
- Streamlining circulation with intelligent pedestrian-vehicle separation
- Establishing a closed-loop smart security system
- Embedding green energy through photovoltaics and sustainable materials
- Applying life-cycle sustainability from start to finish
This holistic design approach empowers the campus to meet the demands of today while remaining resilient for tomorrow—delivering a living model for regenerative, human-centric workplace design.
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