Visionary architect Frank Gehry drew inspiration from Hong Kong’s breath-taking scenery to design a stunning flower-inspired building – and we turned this extraordinary concept into a reality.
It all started with a flower
Award-winning architect Frank Gehry based his highly unconventional Opus Hong Kong designs on Hong Kong’s signature bloom, the beautiful bauhinia flower. And through extremely sophisticated workmanship, we shaped this incredible vision into a sustainable, luxury, residential twelve-story building.
Extraordinary design requires extraordinary engineering
We provided total engineering services from design to completion, gathering a team of experts with the technical ability needed to make a building as structurally sound as it is beautiful.
Project Summary
1 st Frank Gehry's Asian residential complex
12 apartments luxury residential
31 % Annual electricity consumption reduced
Matching form with function
We then developed a unique structural system that includes irregular floor plates, column-free floor slabs and slender external steel columns with glass cladding. These twist around the building like reeds swaying in the breeze – and what’s more, pushing the columns to the externals gives the client the flexibility to change the interior in future.
How do you convey movement in a stationary building?
Unlike most box-like residential buildings in Hong Kong, Opus is designed as a curved, organically shaped tower, and our challenge was to turn this concept into a buildable structures. We used computer modelling and advanced computer analyses to realise the design.
A building future generations will love
Opus signals a shift away from the soaring, heavily-partitioned high-rise buildings that engulf Hong Kong’s skyline. Frank Gehry wanted to make something incredibly beautiful that people will respect and love for generations. We made sure this vision was executed to perfection.