Atelier Lai 来建筑设计工作室

Ten Walls

Ten Walls
 © Jianbo Ke

TEN WALLS

Atelier Lai

ARCHITECTS
Atelier Lai

CLIENT
Ferns · Old City Hot Spring B&b

LEAD ARCHITECT
Ming Tang

STRUCTURAL ENGINEER
Xuewei Zen

TEXT TRANSLATION
Xuerui Wang

PHOTOGRAPHS
Xuguo Tang, Jianbo Ke, Ming Tang

YEAR
2020

LOCATION
huzhou, China

CATEGORY
hotels, Renovation

AREA
621 m²

INTRODUCTION

Situated in the Southern Yangtze area, the project is located in an old street of Qianyuan Town, Deqing City, Zhejiang Province. The old street retains its narrow spatial scale and is accessible only on foot.

Ten Walls
 Courtesy of Atelier LAI
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke

The site is 10 metres wide and 40 meters long. It was once the foundation of an old house, which has now collapsed, leaving an old wall intact. The site is long and narrow in a north-south direction, with the western side adjacent to the gable of the old residence.

A lane about 2 metres wide situates on the eastern side, and the north side is along the old street. The buildings in the old street are mostly whitewashed and tiled with pitched roofs, common in the Southern Yangtze area.

Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang

The new building needs to be integrated into the figure-ground relationship of the old street but also embraces a new pictorial expression. It attempts to satisfy the dialogue of old memory and to meet the new metabolism.

THE LANGUAGE OF PIECES

In traditional Chinese high-density towns, the walls between households are made high for the purpose of fire prevention, creating a visual character of the staggering height of the façade.

Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang

In the 1:4 longitudinal site, the walls are also used as a formal language, arranged in three dimensions, resulting in five slightly pitched roofs, ten horizontal high walls, and three vertical curved walls.

BETWEEN THE PIECES

The horizontal ten pieces of walls divide the long, narrow site into eleven unequally proportioned spaces, either as rooms, courtyards, or equipment platforms.

Ten Walls
© Ming Tang
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang

The rhythm of the spatial incision stems from a reorganization of internal needs, with the more centrally located plumbing bathrooms and equipment platforms interspersed among the larger spaces, which repeat three times. In the beginning, there is an inner courtyard and at the end there is a staircase, creating a rhythm of tension.

BENEATH THE PIECES

The scale of the five-piece roof is close to the figure-ground relationship of the old residential house, covering eleven spaces.

Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang

Depending on the depth, the double-pitched roofs cover the private rooms and the single-pitched roofs cover the public areas. The eaves rise up to form grey spaces, which become platforms for the rooms or paths.

THE MOMENTUM OF THE PIECES

The columns stand up and the beams carry the load. The originally clear-cut frame system is fused together by the piece-wall, and the vertical relationship is softened by a rounded corner, creating uprightness that shifts to a shallow-to-far bearing.

Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang

A bending of the force field, and thus a "momentum". Between and underneath the static pieces, a dynamic momentum is created with the pieces penetrating.

THE PENETRATION OF THE PIECES

The piece penetrates with the momentum, crossing the longitudinal curved wall and cantilevering beyond the fence to reveal its momentum to the outside. The crossing relationship, therefore, needs to be revealed and hidden through the gaps in the façade.

Ten Walls
© Ming Tang
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke

Eastern aesthetics are subtle and euphemistic. Intense manipulation is considered inferior. Instead, 'form' is used to express 'momentum', and 'momentum' is used to express 'force'. The penetration of force is euphemistically expressed.

EPILOGUE

As a shelter, architecture often needs to stand in a rigid position within its surroundings. Yet the internal space needs to be softened to the body's sense and touch. The "Le poème de l’angle droit" is the ambition of modernism, while the softness of the curve is the deep affection of oriental aesthetics.

Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke

Architecture needs to be pure because it is sincere, but sincerity is no match for warmth. The poetry and philosophy of the East is a softened sincerity, not pure, but migratory.

The new architecture is wrapped in the old city, leaving three small inner courtyards as windows to the old times: in August, lingonberries cover the walls with light and shadow flowing. Time etches the old walls, turning them into a warm reality.

Ten Walls
© Ming Tang


Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
 © Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke
Ten Walls
© Jianbo Ke


Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
 Courtesy of Atelier LAI
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang


Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
 © Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang
Ten Walls
© Xuguo Tang


Ten Walls
RF plan
Ten Walls
site plan


Ten Walls
section
Ten Walls
section


Ten Walls
elevations
Ten Walls
elevations


Ten Walls
model
Ten Walls
model
Ten Walls
model
Ten Walls
Courtesy of Atelier LAI


Ten Walls
1F plan
Ten Walls
2F plan
Ten Walls
3F plan
Ten Walls
1F plan

Atelier Lai 来建筑设计工作室
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Atelier Lai 来建筑设计工作室
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