

Urban Village: Non-Destructive Urban Growth in Guangzhou, China
As a native of Guangzhou, I witnessed first hand how rapid urbanization erases the social and cultural identity of China’s informal settlements, known as Urban Villages. These neighborhoods are often the first stop for migrant workers and young residents seeking affordable housing, employment, and opportunity. Though overcrowded and poorly planned, they are also full of vitality, with restaurants, markets, family-run shops, and street life that form a resilient community economy. The project proposes four catalytic prototype buildings inserted into the existing Urban Village fabric. Each Node acts as a vertical urban quarter, combining market halls, workshops, social spaces, cultural programs, and flexible housing support. Rather than relying on demolition or large-scale master planning, the design uses an adaptive structural grid, open floors, terraces, ramps, and atriums to support organic growth over time. The proposal offers an incremental model for improving living conditions, preserving community networks, and renewing Urban Villages across Guangzhou.
Faculty Rebal Knayzeh and Sameena Sitabkhan
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Site Location: The Pearl River flows through southern China into the South China Sea, supporting trade, agriculture, industry, and the economically vital Pearl River Delta.
Site Analysis: Downtown Guangzhou has 272 Urban Villages
Historical Photographs
Four Nodes inserted into an Urban Village
Urban Village Street Typology Analysis
Node Types: Above Existing for Manufacturing, Infill for Entertainment, Agricultural Land Node for Dining, Intensifying Node for Sports
Site Plan of Above-Building Node and Infill Land Node
Site Plan of Above-Building Node and Infill Land Node
Section
Elevation
Section
View of Above-Building Node Prioritizing Flexible Ground Floor Use
View of Terrace-Bridge Linking Two Buildings
View of Ground Level Entry at Agricultural Land Node
View of Food Stalls at Agricultural Land Node
View of Agricultural Land
View of Agricultural Land
View of Roof Garden
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