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Ippolito Fleitz Group has turned a five-storey building in Hangzhou into a next-generation workplaces tailored to China’s thriving e-commerce industry, while meeting the evolving expectations of a younger workforce.
Hangzhou is China’s e-commerce capital. More than 55,000 e-commerce companies call this city home, and sitting within the massive MAX Technology Park is this 2,200 square metre show office designed to prove that work environments can be smarter, more flexible and a whole lot more interesting.
The ground floor lobby hits hard. At 7.5 metres high, it packs in a reception, lounge, exhibition space, meeting rooms and an auditorium—all layered together in one impressive volume. It’s playful, it’s confident, and it sets the tone for everything that follows.
On the second floor, the Stuttgart-based practice addresses the specialist requirements of tech and e-commerce businesses. There are R&D labs with glass walls that put innovation on display, plus fully kitted-out studios for video, audio and live streaming. These are built for the way modern commerce operates, where content creation is part of the daily workflow.
Floors three and four tackle the bread and butter of office life. The layouts shift between solo work, open-plan setups and various meeting configurations. Nothing feels locked in. And scattered throughout are spots designed for the kind of spontaneous conversations where good ideas tend to show up.
The fifth floor takes a more symbolic approach. A central column fans out across the ceiling, its fins spreading overhead like the branches of a tree. It’s a deliberate move and a visual statement about leadership that’s protective rather than hierarchical.
What ties it all together is an understanding that in fast-moving industries like e-commerce, the best work happens when people and technology connect easily.
[Images courtesy of Ippolito Fleitz Group. Photography by Zhu Di.]
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