Architecture

Cloud Corridor: High-rise vision for the future of housing in LA

Cloud Corridor: High-rise vision for the future of housing in LA
Nine interconnected towers dotted with greenery and public spaces would provide a city above the streets
Nine interconnected towers dotted with greenery and public spaces would provide a city above the streets
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If you'd like to check out the proposal in person, get yourself down to the A+D Museum by November 6
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If you'd like to check out the proposal in person, get yourself down to the A+D Museum by November 6
Cloud Corridor primarily addresses urban sprawl by imagining a greater focus on building up, rather than out
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Cloud Corridor primarily addresses urban sprawl by imagining a greater focus on building up, rather than out
Nine interconnected towers dotted with greenery and public spaces would provide a city above the streets
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Nine interconnected towers dotted with greenery and public spaces would provide a city above the streets
MAD founder Ma Yansong has drawn on Chinese scientist Qian Xuesen's Shanshui City proposal for Cloud Corridor
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MAD founder Ma Yansong has drawn on Chinese scientist Qian Xuesen's Shanshui City proposal for Cloud Corridor
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MAD Architects has created a thought-provoking vision for the future of LA's residential architecture in the form of a vertical-living, high-density urban village concept dubbed Cloud Corridor.

The Cloud Corridor concept seeks to address LA's urban sprawl by focusing on building vertically, rather than horizontally. This is not a new idea by any means, but MAD takes it further by connecting the cluster of towers with sky-high corridors, thus enabling residents to move between buildings without being required to descend to ground level. The skyscrapers would be covered in greenery and boast public areas, multiple viewing platforms, and generous garden spaces.

The philosophy underpinning Cloud Corridor (and this is about philosophy, not detail) sees MAD founder Ma Yansong drawing on Chinese scientist Qian Xuesen's Shanshui City concept, which encompasses a return to nature and the individual's emotional response to the surrounding world. A similar design language can be found in MAD's ongoing Chaoyang Park Plaza project in Beijing.

If you'd like to check out the proposal in person, get yourself down to the A+D Museum by November 6
If you'd like to check out the proposal in person, get yourself down to the A+D Museum by November 6

MAD is one of several firms to plot the path that LA's residential architecture may be headed in the not-too-distant future in exhibition entitled Shelter: Rethinking How We Live in Los Angeles, which is currently underway at the city's A+D Museum.

If you'd like to check out the Cloud Corridor proposal, complete with scale model, it is installed in the A+D Museum until November 6. Another five concepts also feature in the exhibition.

Sources: MAD, A+D Museum via Arch Daily

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3 comments
3 comments
yu
yes, nothing like high rise, high density, housing when you are living on a major fault line.
flylowguy
Those ought to be a lot of fun when they sway wildly in the next 'big one'. The nod to environmentalism with the ivy climbing the building is a nice touch, though.
Bob Flint
Mad indeed...