Lattice-based cryptography is a highly potential candidate that protects against the threats of quantum attack. At Usenix Security 2016, Alkim, Ducas, Pöpplemann, and Schwabe proposed a post-quantum key exchange scheme called NewHope, based on a variant of lattice problem, the ring-learning-with-errors (RLWE) problem. In this work, we propose a high performance hardware architecture for NewHope. Our implementation requires 6,680 slices, 9,412 FFs, 18,756 LUTs, 8 DSPs and 14 BRAMs on Xilinx Zynq-7000 equipped with 28mm Artix-7 7020 FPGA. In our hardware design of NewHope key exchange, the three phases of key exchange costs 51.9, 78.6 and 21.1 s, respectively. It achieves more than 4.8 times better in terms of area-time product compared to previous results of hardware implementation of NewHope-Simple from Oder and Güneysu at Latincrypt 2017.