Golden
Arch Design Award
Winner
in
Interior Design Category
'23
LIGHT HOUSE
Designed by
Fei Zhao
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Team Members:
LIGHT HOUSE
Residential Architecture
Zheng Zhou
Fei Zhao
323studio.com
Ran Chen
Photo Credits:
WM STUDIO
Copyrights:
323 STUDIO
As a narrow north-south facing townhouse, the original building has 4 floors, 2 above ground and 2 below (the basement has a height of 5.5m and can be divided into 2 floors with only a small patio to provide light). Facing south as the main direction of light, it relies on a stairwell to connect the various floors and comes with a lift. After observing the site and realizing that no well landscape was around the site, we decided to make an Inward facing construction within it.
The original basement space occupied half of the whole area, but the existing lighting in the basement only allowed us to make some useless space out of it. In order to improve the utilization rate of the whole underground space and increase the lighting, we want to create a brand-new construction around the light indoors.
Modern concrete residential architecture is mechanical, industrial and out of touch with nature. We have deliberately preserved the concrete texture of the original building. Radiant natural light is the source of the form of this space. The excavated patio creates a completely new façade, with the entire block in white to interpret the new, pure nature of the building. In such an environment, the symbiosis between the organic and the mechanistic is particularly important. Light is brought in from the original building windows on the 2nd and 1st floors, with an increasing range of natural light as the height drops…
In terms of functional distribution, we clearly divide the functional areas of each floor, which are both independent and well-connected.
The 1st floor and the 2nd floor underground are the main floors for daily access, serving as public spaces, while the relatively independent 2nd floor serves as residential spaces. Owners also have the need for daily gatherings, so we try to make each functional area larger.