Cihampelas City Walk

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Cihampelas City Walk in Bandung city, Indonesia

Name Cihampelas City Walk
Place Jalan Cihampelas, Bandung
Country Indonesia
Topic Commercial Environment
Author(s) Nino Christian Handoyo
Completion Please enter the date of completion
Client Deni (as the investor)
Project costs Please enter the costs (if known)
Bandung citywalk.jpg
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Rationale: Why is this case study interesting?

The architect uses a unique concept this project. The architect designed this shopping center to provide a commercial area for Bandung citizens without destroy the nature. Because the exsisting form of this site is a grove . That's why the architect presents the concept of city walk (ciwalk) , so this shopping center offers 'a shopping center/ space in the middle of a town' atmposhere, or we can call it broadway atmospehre (shopping townatmospehre)

There's a lot of green spaces and also plaza in this project , which has function as a connector from one retail shop area to the other retail shop area.

Author's perspective

  • What theoretical or professional perspective do you bring to the case study?

Balance and the local content theory

Landscape and/or urban context

  • Biogeography, cultural features, overall character, history and dynamics

Illustration: Map; sketches; short descriptive analyses Bandung, the capital of West Java province, located about 180 km (112 miles) southeast of Jakarta, is the fourth largest city in Indonesia [1] with over 2.6 million population in 2006 and over 6.7 million people on the greater Bandung regency & metropolitan area. It's rated the fastest growing city / urban region in Indonesia [2]. Its elevation is 768 metres (2,520 ft) above sea level and is surrounded by up to 2,400 m (7,874 ft) high Late Tertiary and Quarternary volcanic terrain. [3] The 400 km² flat of central Bandung plain is situated in the middle of 2,340.88 km² wide of the Bandung Basin; the basin comprises Bandung, the Cimahi satellite city, part of Bandung Regency, and part of Sumedang Regency. [4] The basin's main river is the Citarum; one of its branches, the Cikapundung, divides Bandung from north to south before it merges with Citarum again in Karawang. The Bandung Basin is an important source of water for drinking water, irrigation and fisheries, and its 6,147 million m³ of groundwater is a major reservoir for the city.

Cultural/social/political context

  • Brief explanation of culture, political economy, legal framework

Illustration: Bullet points, image, background notes

Jalan Cihampelas is, amongst the tourists, better known as Jeansstreet . In the past, it was a cheap and therefore, popular place to score some new jeans. Although the prices have been increasing steadily, and a bargain is found better in other places in Bandung these days, Chihampelas is still worth a visit. Not so much because of the enormous amount of clothing that is displayed in abundance at the shops lining the busy street, since unfortunately quality is dubious and it mostly concerns tacky shirts with poorly glued on brand names. The ‘attraction' lies in the huge statues of all-time favourite moviestars that adorn the fronts of the shops. Sylvester Stallone as Rambo, inclusive of bazooka, is lined up next to Spiderman, while on the opposite side of the street Batman invites you to take a look inside the ‘Superhero Factory Outlet'. The kitsch glamour that Cihampelas displays is quite a sight, although more in a grotesque way than genuinely attractive. ‘Cheap' is indeed a word that will come to mind, be it not in the moneysaving sense of it. The street itself is very busy, with traffic congestions all day round, and a lot of street vendors, offering to sew your newly-bought jeans for actual fit, as well as other strange paraphernalia such as BB guns, and miniature kung fu fighters. This is all accompanied by the loud music that is supposed to attract customers to the shops. All in all, the sounds and sights plus the lack of sidewalks make Cihampelas a slightly tiring experience, but nevertheless a spectacle of distaste and kitsch in its purest albeit most dilapidated form. For a more sterile environment head over to the Ci walk, a favourite amongst Bandung's more wealthy shoppers. It consists of a conglomeration of more up market shops in a European themed atmosphere. It is called a ‘new concept' mall, and in effect, tries to offer another shopping experience by creating a themed setting and added security while deducting traffic and other ‘undesirable elements' such as beggars and street vendors. Most worldwide chains and branches such as Starbucks and Dunkin Donuts are represented and some family restaurants with Japanese and Chinese menus. Both Cihampelas and Ci walk are easily reachable by car, the Ci walk spurs a big secure parking lot. To get there by angkot , just take any green minivan that says Cihampelas on the front window and get off at the sight of the superheroes looming large over your head.

HISTORY : Jalan Cihampelas is, amongst the tourists, better known as Jeansstreet . In the past, it was a cheap and therefore, popular place to score some new jeans. Although the prices have been increasing steadily, and a bargain is found better in other places in Bandung these days, Chihampelas is still worth a visit. Not so much because of the enormous amount of clothing that is displayed in abundance at the shops lining the busy street, since unfortunately quality is dubious and it mostly concerns tacky shirts with poorly glued on brand names. The ‘attraction' lies in the huge statues of all-time favourite moviestars that adorn the fronts of the shops. Sylvester Stallone as Rambo, inclusive of bazooka, is lined up next to Spiderman, while on the opposite side of the street Batman invites you to take a look inside the ‘Superhero Factory Outlet'. The kitsch glamour that Cihampelas displays is quite a sight, although more in a grotesque way than genuinely attractive. ‘Cheap' is indeed a word that will come to mind, be it not in the moneysaving sense of it. The street itself is very busy, with traffic congestions all day round, and a lot of street vendors, offering to sew your newly-bought jeans for actual fit, as well as other strange paraphernalia such as BB guns, and miniature kung fu fighters. This is all accompanied by the loud music that is supposed to attract customers to the shops. All in all, the sounds and sights plus the lack of sidewalks make Cihampelas a slightly tiring experience, but nevertheless a spectacle of distaste and kitsch in its purest albeit most dilapidated form. For a more sterile environment head over to the Ci walk, a favourite amongst Bandung's more wealthy shoppers. It consists of a conglomeration of more up market shops in a European themed atmosphere. It is called a ‘new concept' mall, and in effect, tries to offer another shopping experience by creating a themed setting and added security while deducting traffic and other ‘undesirable elements' such as beggars and street vendors. Most worldwide chains and branches such as Starbucks and Dunkin Donuts are represented and some family restaurants with Japanese and Chinese menus. Both Cihampelas and Ci walk are easily reachable by car, the Ci walk spurs a big secure parking lot. To get there by angkot , just take any green minivan that says Cihampelas on the front window and get off at the sight of the superheroes looming large over your head.

History

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Illustration: Table or time line

Spatial analysis of area/project/plan

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  • How has it been shaped? Were there any critical decisions?

Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes

Core questions working group open spaces

How does the design of an open space contribute to a run down neighbourhood?

Judging to the 'broadway' concept of this project

How are open spaces linked to the adjacent areas?

(e.g. neighbourhoods, city centre, river)

How are open spaces used?

(e.g. which groups meet there, which functions does an open space fullfil)

Which elements make an open space successful and attractive?

How can the historical background of an open space be shown to the public?

Analysis of program/function

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  • How have they been expressed or incorporated?

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Analysis of design/planning process

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Analysis of use/users

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Illustration: Map/diagram/sketches photos and background notes

Future development directions

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  • Are there any future goals?

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Peer reviews or critique

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Points of success and limitations

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Good timing and good tactics

What can be generalized from this case study?

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Short statement plus background notes

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References

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