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JD Museum to open in Shenzhen Bay

Writer: Cao Zhen  |  Editor: Lin Qiuying  |  From: Original  |  Updated: 2026-01-20

China’s e-commerce giant JD.com announced today that its JD Museum will open at the company’s new headquarters in the Shenzhen Bay Super Headquarters Base, Nanshan District, at the end of 2027, according to the museum’s official website.

A computer-generated image of JD.com’s new headquarters in the Shenzhen Bay Super Headquarters Base, where JD Museum is located. Image from JD.com

The museum will have a total floor area of more than 10,000 square meters and focus on contemporary visual and performing arts and culture. Facilities will include spaces for live performance, immersive installations, exhibitions, participatory workshops, and creative retail.

Robin Peckham, former co-director of Taipei Dangdai (2019-2025) and editor-in-chief of LEAP (2014-2019), will lead the museum. Peckham has curated exhibitions for institutions including UCCA, the Fosun Foundation, and K11 Art Foundation.

The museum’s programming will treat art as a cross-disciplinary experience, addressing contemporary concerns such as technology, ecology, and urbanism. Emphasizing a balance between technological innovation and human experience, the museum plans to increase accessibility for young people and the local community, and to support artists and audiences through exhibitions, education, research, publishing, commissions, and collecting.

JD.com’s Shenzhen headquarters, designed by Büro Ole Scheeren with spatial design by Neri&Hu Design and Research Office, is currently under construction and described as a “Scenic City.”

In the two years leading up to the museum’s opening, the institution will roll out a public art program — including workshops and touring exhibitions — to engage artists, curators, architects, JD employees, and the public.


China’s e-commerce giant JD.com announced today that its JD Museum will open at the company’s new headquarters in the Shenzhen Bay Super Headquarters Base, Nanshan District, at the end of 2027, according to the museum’s official website.