10 Design has won a competition to design Landmark 55 in the emerging Starlake Urban Area of Hanoi, Vietnam. The 178,888 sqm (1.926 million sqft) development includes two towers, containing a 55-story hotel and condominium hotel tower with a dramatic sky lobby and a 41-story office tower.
A four-story retail pavilion is found between both towers within the middle of the location with a lively F&B garden and a hotel amenity terrace that connect across the location . Ground-level plazas and pedestrian streets activate both edges of the central retail pavilion and are lined with retail and restaurants.
“Landmark 55 is located within the new Starlake district, which is designated to become the new administrative center of Hanoi and will become the city’s primary location for diplomatic compounds and international cultural and convention facilities,” commented Barry Shapiro, Managing Partner – Asia of 10 Design.
Design Partner of 10 Design, Leonard Milford, explained: “Whilst the plots of the new district are typically being developed as ‘traditional’ isolated podium and tower compositions, we checked out developing this plot as a connective catalyst for the region that might function on variety of contextual scales – locale, neighborhood, district, and city.”
From the citywide scale, the location extents are governed by the 2 towers which are staggered in plan so on optimize views to the West Lake and to supply the respective street addresses that both the office and hotel require. The skyline from the town center is articulated by a cantilevering lobby for the hotel directing views out across West Lake and beyond as a replacement belvedere for the town .
The lower volumes of the towers are massed to make a more intimate and refined pedestrian-orientated place within the district. The central jewel building sits in an avenue of activity leading from the most street frontage and opening onto the Central Park at the north of the plot. This element provides a shaded and human scale of activity and massing between the towers creating clear access from the context and active roofscape forming extensions of the general public park.