Architecture Students Recognized for Innovative Chinatown Market Design

Every year, the holds the ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× Award in Architecture student competition, which recognizes the talent of architecture students from the greater ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× area. For the 2021 program, College of Architecture students Noah Donica (M.ARCH. Candidate) and Zhiqiang Shi (M.ARCH. Candidate) were awarded second place for their design of a marketplace complex in ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ×ās Chinatown neighborhood. The design was originally created for a spring semester studio project working with faculty member James Baird.
Donica and Shiās project, titled āLaminations: Chinatown Market,ā aims to create a pathway between two sections of Chinatown bifurcated by Cermak Road. North of Cermak is āNew Chinatown,ā which consists mainly of the large shopping complex of Chinatown Squareābuilt in 1993āalong Archer Avenue; condos, townhomes, and single-family houses; and Ping Tom Memorial Park. To the south of Cermak sits āOld Chinatown,ā which was established in the early twentieth century as an enclave for Chinese Americans who were pushed out of the cityās downtown commercial district, the Loop. Further exacerbating that division is a large parking lot at Wentworth Avenue and Cermak, which serves as the site for the project.
āThe idea of connection between old and new Chinatown was one of our biggest priorities,ā says Donica. āWith trains coming through that area and the interstate dumping out at this intersection thereās the potential for it to be this big hub of activity that can serve as an entrance to the entire neighborhood.ā
To bridge the divide between both sides of Chinatown, entrances to the marketplace are positioned to circulate foot traffic north and south, creating a pathway from old to new Chinatown and vice versa. From east to west, the buildingās programming transitions from an outdoor plaza to temporary indoor/outdoor marketplaces, to an indoor food court, to permanent marketplace stalls, to, finally, a cooking school and greenhouse space. Underneath the building is a Chinese cultural museum, which can be viewed 24/7 through light wells that provide views from the plaza to the artifacts below.
The proposal takes on a canopy structure, with large glass walls that can be opened to increase circulation and spaceāa consideration influenced by the COVID-19 pandemicāand transparent roof panels so that riders on the Red Line āLā platform running directly above the building can see into the space.
āWe focused on what the market can do for the neighborhood. We wanted it to be for the neighborhood but also for people in other parts of ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× to come to,ā says Shi. āMaking it so that the people on the train can see into the market, as well as the rest of Chinatown, we think will encourage them to visit.ā
As second-place recipients, Donica and Shi received a $300 prize. The duo also received the Brothers Finfer Scholarship for āLaminationsā at the College of Architectureās 2021 Spring Awards program.
Additionally, several College of Architecture students received honorable mentions in the competition: Yiti āAliceā Gao (M.ARCH. Candidate) and Albert Santoso (M.ARCH. Candidate) for their project āThe Sieve: Uptown ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× Apartmentsā (Instructors: David Brininstool and Andy Metter); Austin Bower (M.ARCH. Candidate), Spencer Goff (M.ARCH. Candidate), and Pengbo Liao (M.ARCH. Candidate) for āOpen UpTownāExploring Porosityā (Instructor: Tom Brock); and Rama Alsaid-Souliman (M.ARCH. Candidate), Bower, and Lauren Tudor (M.ARCH. Candidate) for āUnder the Umbrella: Chinatown Market Hallā (Instructors: Brininstool and Metter).
Photo: A rendering of the project that Noah Donica (M.ARCH. Candidate) and Zhiqiang Shi (M.ARCH. Candidate) were awarded second place for in the American Institute of Architects ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× Chapterās ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ× Award in Architecture student competition, a design of a marketplace complex in ŗ£½ĒĀŅĀ×ās Chinatown neighborhood (provided)