The Evolution of Plot Morphology and Design Strategies in Built Heritage Renewal in Central Shanghai from the Perspective of Sharing Cities
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. The Sharing Economy and the Sharing City
2.2. Trends and Features of Built Heritage Renewal: From Creative Park Model to a More Sharing Appraoch
2.3. Plot Morphology Evolution and Renewal Methods
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Case Study and Criteria for Selection
3.2. Research Methods
4. Results
4.1. Morphological Analysis Results
4.2. Case-Specific Analysis Results
5. Discussion
5.1. From the Sharing Economy to the Sharing City
5.2. New Features in the Evolution of Plot Morphology: Three Types of Boundary Change Bring About an Increase in the Street Frontage Index and the Emergence of POPS
5.3. “Sharing by Transfer” and “Architecture for the Other”
6. Conclusions
- The evolution of renewal strategies: Functional planning is no longer exclusively centered on a singular economic gain but rather prioritizes a multifaceted value proposition. The combination of online and offline components, coupled with the exploration of traffic and sharing, progressively impacts conventional functional positioning.
- Modification of Plot and Architectural Morphology: Previously enclosed sites have been changed through intentional design strategies into more open physical layouts that provide new activity zones and spatial images. The physical removal of borders has broken vertical constraints and improved space accessibility.
- Changes in Spatial Utilization: Areas accommodating a wider spectrum of users and emphasizing service for others have become more common. Architectural spaces are being used more frequently through several modalities—such as allocated use, borrowed use, and co-use—to accommodate a greater number of individuals, therefore creating an innovative route for renewal based on transfer for the advantage of others.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | In May 2017, Shanghai proposed for the first time that there should be “readable buildings, walkable neighborhoods, and a city with warmth”. The phrase “readable buildings”, with its literary quality and profound respect for the city’s history, resonated widely and sparked considerable public interest. |
2 | Shanghai has officially issued the “Implementation Measures for Urban Renewal in Shanghai” (Shanghai Government Document No. 20, 2015) and introduced a series of supporting documents, thereby formally and systematically regulating urban renewal work. |
3 | On May 9, 2002, the Ministry of Land and Resources issued the Provisions on the Assignment of State-owned Land Use Rights through Bidding, Auction, and Listing (Decree No. 11), which came into effect on 1 July 2002. This decree fully established a system for the transfer of land use rights for operational purposes through bidding, auction, or listing and clearly stipulated that all types of operational land—such as those for commercial, tourism, entertainment, and commodity housing purposes—must be assigned through one of these market-based methods. |
4 | WYSH, short for Wuyi Shanghai, is located in Changning District, Shanghai, between Wuyi Road and Zhaohua Road. It brings together old garden villas and a number of historic buildings predominantly showcasing Spanish, English country, and Art Deco styles. It is one of the urban renewal initiatives in Changning District. |
5 | The Shanghai Municipal Government issued the “Opinions on Promoting Saving and Intensive Utilisation of Industrial Land and Accelerating the Development of Modern Service Industry” (Hufuban [2008] No. 37), which puts forward the policy of the three principles of unchanged property owner, unchanged building structure and unchanged land use nature. The policy is often referred to as the “Three No Change” policy. |
6 | Since 2014, Shanghai’s land planning authorities have issued a series of documents, including (1) Implementation Measures for Revitalizing Stock Industrial Land in Shanghai (Trial) (Hufuban [2014] No. 25); (2) Shanghai Urban Renewal Implementation Measures (Hufufa [2015] No. 20). |
7 | SIOBP, short for Shanghai Institute of Biological Products and also known as Columbia Circle, is an urban renewal project located at 1262 Yan’an West Road. It includes Sunke Villa, Columbia Country Club, Navy Club with its attached swimming pool, and several industrial buildings. The property rights are retained by the Shanghai Biological Products Research Institute, while the land use has transitioned from educational and research purposes to a combination of commercial, office, and community service uses, altering the usage rights of the parcel. |
8 | Tianditu is the public version of the national geographic information public service platform led by the National Administration of Surveying, Mapping, and Geoinformation. It is an important part of “Digital China” and aims to provide authoritative, reliable, and unified geographic information services to the public, enterprises, professional departments, and government agencies. Website: https://www.tianditu.gov.cn/ (accessed on 20 April 2025). |
9 | Attractive or interesting enough to be suitable for photographing and posting on the social media service Instagram. Cambridge English Dictionary. |
10 | Since April 2023, the “Half Suzhou River” public welfare market at X Tower provides free venue space for monthly community activities, featuring public welfare stalls and a “circular marketplace” for household item reuse. Based on the interview with the architects, developers, property managers, and residents. |
11 | Founded in 2013, Rednote is not merely a content-sharing app but has gradually evolved into a lifestyle platform centered around content-based social interaction. It has significantly shaped young people’s consumer perceptions, aesthetic standards, and modes of social expression, becoming a quintessential example of a new-generation “discursive space”. |
12 | Based on the structured interviews with the developers, designers, and merchants of WYSH. Different positions on issues related to governance models and co-management. |
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Stage | Time | Features | Cases Examined |
---|---|---|---|
1st: Tender, Auction, and Listing Policy | 2002–Present |
| Shanghai Xintiandi (pre-sharing economy) and WYSH4 (post-sharing economy) |
2nd: “Three No Change” Policy | 2008–Present |
| Jingyuan Fashion Creative Center (pre-sharing economy) and X Tower project (post-sharing economy) |
3rd: Rights-Holder-Led Policy | 2014–Present |
| First and second stages of SIOBP7 project (spanning pre-and post-sharing economy periods) |
Cases | Policy Framework | Physical Boundary Change | Ownership Boundary Change | Activity Boundary Change | Street Frontage Index Improvement |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Xintiandi | Land Tender, Auction and Listing | Partial transformation | Complete redefinition | Significant expansion | Moderate (commercial pathway) |
WYSH | Significant expansion | Diversified | Significant expansion | High (2.5× increase) | |
Jingyuan | Three No-change | Minimal change | Unchanged | Minimal change | Minimal (semi-closed system) |
X Tower | Modified to face city | Unchanged | Extended toward community | Substantial (city square, waterfront) | |
SIOBP Phase 1 | Rights-Holder-Led | Expansion | Unchanged | Expansion | Moderate (multiple entrances) |
SIOBP Phase 2 | Complete transformation | Complete transformation | Complete transformation | High (permeable network) |
Project Name | Retail Rent | Office Rent | Business Mode |
---|---|---|---|
Xintiandi | 20–25 RMB/m2/Day | / | High-end business, consumer seating |
WYSH | 7–7.5 RMB/m2/Day | Not disclosed to any third parties | Commercial integration of community-oriented offices, light dining mixed with trendy consumption, and provision of public spaces. |
Jingyuan | / | 4–4.5 RMB/m2/Day | Decentralized leasing, park-style office |
X Tower | 10–15 RMB/m2/Day | 4.5–7 RMB/m2/Day | Individual tenants combine community commerce, flexibly partitioning office spaces. |
SIOBP I&II | 11 RMB/m2/Day | 7–9 RMB/m2/Day | Primarily commercial, with some multi-story sections for office space. |
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Li, Z.; Liu, M.; Zhu, Y. The Evolution of Plot Morphology and Design Strategies in Built Heritage Renewal in Central Shanghai from the Perspective of Sharing Cities. Land 2025, 14, 959. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14050959
Li Z, Liu M, Zhu Y. The Evolution of Plot Morphology and Design Strategies in Built Heritage Renewal in Central Shanghai from the Perspective of Sharing Cities. Land. 2025; 14(5):959. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14050959
Chicago/Turabian StyleLi, Zhenyu, Mengxun Liu, and Yichen Zhu. 2025. "The Evolution of Plot Morphology and Design Strategies in Built Heritage Renewal in Central Shanghai from the Perspective of Sharing Cities" Land 14, no. 5: 959. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14050959
APA StyleLi, Z., Liu, M., & Zhu, Y. (2025). The Evolution of Plot Morphology and Design Strategies in Built Heritage Renewal in Central Shanghai from the Perspective of Sharing Cities. Land, 14(5), 959. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14050959