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Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal
Sumit Singhal loves modern architecture. He comes from a family of builders who have built more than 20 projects in the last ten years near Delhi in India. He has recently started writing about the architectural projects that catch his imagination.

Mountain House in Mist, China by Shulin Architectural Design

 
January 25th, 2019 by Sumit Singhal

Article source: Shulin Architectural Design

The house is located in an ancient mountain forest in Wuyi County, Jinhua, Zhejiang Province. The village maintains complete features from old inhabitants in this area, with buildings scatters in different altitudes by the mountain line and dense trees with history of over one hundred years at the entrance. The book house sits not far from the square at the entrance, beside which is well-preserved courtyard houses made in rammed earth. The old cowshed used to locate at the yard, but was removed after it collapsed.

The book house aims to create a serene reading space that clams people down, thus attracting more young people and children to return to the mountains. It also provides a colorful and quiet place so that children and the elderly can feel freedom and happiness in this house.

North façade of the book house, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

  • Architects: Shulin Architectural Design
  • Project: Mountain House in Mist
  • Location: Liangjiashan Village, Liucheng Town, Wuyi, Jinhua, China
  • Photography: Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin
  • Project Owner: Hongfu Tourism Group Co., Ltd.
  • Moderator: Chen Lin
  • Project Architect: Liu Dongying
  • Participating Architects: Liu Dongying, Yang Shiqiang, Jian Xuelian
  • Building Area: 156㎡
  • Design Time: 2016.12-2017.8

Mountain House in Mist, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Bring the space and the village closer

One of our initial thoughts is to spare room for the villagers, which also brings an intuitive feeling. In the first floor of the book house, there is an overhead semi-outdoor open space, and ten structural columns hold the entire house. The closed spaces are on the second floor, connected to the outside with an out-door staircase. There is only a tiny water bar on the first floor for water and beverages, the other places are totally open for villagers to drink, chat and for kids to play. The open space connects all the possible activities.

Off-contact book house from the southwest corner, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

West façade of the book house, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

At the same time, from the perspective of the space relationship, the book house is in a triangle area, with the main walkway on the south and a three-meter stone wall on the north. Above the wall there is playground for children. By lifting up the close space of the house to give room to the space between the ground floor and the walkway, passers-by are also made able to rest under the house at any time. The second floor is on the same level as the children’s play area, which makes it convenient for kids to read books or play while their parents can still pay attention to their children when reading. Whether it is from the perspective of the nature of the site or that of understanding rural life, we hope that architecture and villagers, as well as the rural environment, can remain friendly to each other.

Book house in the evening, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Height difference between the house and the place, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Patio and Time

The patio is placed in the book house as the core with a pleasant scale. There is a surface of water below the bottom of the first-floor patio. At rainy days, water rain falls from the patio into the pool, and the sound can be heard inside the house; while when the sun shines directly, it creates a unique light and shadow effect. A patio is designed in such a small place because it makes the house more relevant to nature, time and space. This is a sense of time in the house from my perspective.

Bird’s eye view of the book house, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

The book house integrated in stacked roof, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

The setting of the patio looks like it is waiting for a certain time – for the sun to cast in a beautiful shadow, for the rain to drip ripples, or for the breeze to blow in. At those moments, the patio is set as special space waiting for its significance of being created. The essence of rural architecture as I understand is a state in which people and space, people and nature, and people and time coexist harmoniously. This patio, makes it happen by including sunlight, rain and air into the interior space.

Overlook of the building fitting into the surroundings, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Villagers drinking tea and chatting on the top of the book house, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Corridor and Communication

There are two rounds of back-shaped bookshelves in the second floor, creating a corridor around the patio and the reading space in the middle. With a comfortable width of one meter, it suspends from the structure of the first floor. The corridor provides the experience of walking around in the garden, while a lot of holes are opened according to the modular size of the back-shaped bookshelves, letting the light and air flow through the difference of size and height.

Patio-and-the-water-pool, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Reading space, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

As the reader wonders around in the corridor, their horizon opens together with the entrance, and the boundaries disappear. When standing on the other side of the entrance, people can see through the window and watch others reading books at the balcony, and farther, the hills and forests far away. The perspective from different layers creates the communication between people, space and the environment.

Multiple states of childrenGÇÖs reading space, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Peeking into the reading space inside the shelves, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Experimental Attempt

We have always been insisting the design and research method of research. During the design of the book house, we made two experiments: the experiment on the morphological type, and the experiment on the application of materials.

In terms of morphological type, the closed space of the book house is raised up, using the double-sloping roof form and slope of the local dwellings, as well as the traditional roofing and the grey tiles, but small adjustments was made on the roof ridge. It is deflected by 6.5°bringing a subtle morphological change to the roof, making the one side of the roof higher than the other, and enabling the space to change through the inclination of roof and the shelves.

Reading room with gentle light, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Corridor, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

In terms of materials, the bookcases use the modular structure of there-centimeter thick pine wood, and is controlled by a unified modular scale language. The vertical frame of the bookshelf and the structural beam of the roof are in one-to-one correspondence, forming an overall language logic system. On the outer façade, the relatively rare sun panels in the village make the whole house translucent, and the light in the room becomes gentle through the sun panels, creating a comfortable environment for reading. The translucent material allows readers inside to have a glimpse of the outdoor landscape, achieving a semi-transparent spatial experience and atmosphere.

Relation between the shelves and the roof, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Staircase between the entrance and the upper floor, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Many architects are unfamiliar with the countryside, but they also make attempts to design. We are the same. We are the same. With the hope of exploration and integration, we try to intervene in the countryside as architects. In many cases, the inspiration not only comes from the intuitive judgment of the architect, but is also rooted in the countryside itself, so that the locality and creativity can connect well. In fact, there are no standards for the countryside, no fixed rules, no uniqueness, and good or bad can only be judged by the village itself. I hope this will be a good start.

Spatial connection of the bookshelves, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Bookshelves relevant to reading status, Image Courtesy © Zhao Yilong and Chen Lin

Manual model, Image Courtesy © Shulin Architectural Design

Manual model, Image Courtesy © Shulin Architectural Design

Section, Image Courtesy © Shulin Architectural Design

First floor plan, Image Courtesy © Shulin Architectural Design

General layout, Image Courtesy © Shulin Architectural Design

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Categories: Book Store, House, Library




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