Unlike the aesthetic conception of the Tianjin Blue Water Park project, the "modernism" of Beijing architecture seems to adapt to the rushed daily life of contemporary people more quickly and "understand" their expectations for the future. From the shape to the function, Yuanyang Tianzhu centered on the owner's life demands. The designer creates a multi-dimensional divergent experience in a limited space.
The owner spends half of his time working at home, hoping not to disturb each other when he is with his children and parents. Therefore, the designer has created a composite space utilization, so that each floor not only realizes the conventional functions but also used for other purposes. The south-facing space is more open, adding storage areas and creating a happy home for three generations, creating the most massive space utilization.
The transitional space is the hub of daily life. The designer disassembles it into white and black installations and expands the mood and memory of passing through this area with a realistic photographic work. From the living room to the kitchen, the same creative technique used to string together. Brass, glass, mirrors, and other durable materials mix abstract artwork, giving the space an invisible field and rhythm.
Interestingly, the designer also "helps collect" natural elements and decorates them into the living room. The "growth of trees" on the wall did not stop but spread downwards to become part of the house. People, art, and nature merge, leaving a large area of gray-textured walls blank and left for imagination.
Wu Wei DESIGN committed to creating the perfect residence experience with a life-long tracking service, to surprise the owners with the most intimate and high-quality design and engineering solutions by giving each building a unique soul.