The ‘Solar Drop’ [images below] [attached to the bridge, resembling a ship] starts off with 250 square meters of photovoltaic panels. Next, the white, ship-like ‘body’ of the building is coated in titanium dioxide [TiO2] in it’s anatase form - which is self cleaning, and can aid in the reduction of local air pollution through it’s reaction with ultraviolet radiation [I think the argument here is that when organic particulates in the air come into contact with the building the TiO2 acts as a catalyst, causing them to break down - thus diminishing the amount of these particulates in the air].

ANTI-SMOG’s Solar Drop - lower level
Inside the ‘Drop’ are public meeting and function rooms and a large exhibition space - all organized around a central courtyard/garden - a ‘phyto-purified aquatic lagoon’.

ANTI-SMOG’s Solar Drop - main level

ANTI-SMOG’s Solar Drop - roof
The second part of Anti-Smog is the Wind Tower [below] - a spiraling public art gallery, capped by a ‘garden in the sky’. The building skin is a layering of a number of materials and technologies, including ‘green’ plant elements and Darrieus machines [wind turbines] to take advantage of the local prevailing winds to create renewable energy.

ANTI-SMOG’s Wind Tower, showing proposed ‘green’ growth