Project Details
- Project Name
- Spring Art Museum
- Project Types
- Cultural
- Project Scope
- New Construction
- Size
- 50,590 sq. feet
- Year Completed
- 2015
- Shared by
- Selin Ashaboglu
- Team
- Zhang Xiaodong, Liu Xing, Di Xiangjie, Feng Jiancheng, Feng Shuxian, He Feng, Wang Boyu
- Project Status
- Built
Project Description
FROM THE ARCHITECTS:
Our clients
for this project are from local who believe in contemporary art, and intended
the museum to be a platform to promote young artists. The two main programs of
the museum are art exhibition and artist residence. In the design we sought a piece of
architecture that is open, culturally rooted, and arousing a feeling of
sublimity, which we believe, although through different means, shares the same
purpose as the art it accommodates.
Located next to a lake, the site marks the east end of a cluster
consisting of art exhibition spaces and artist studios. The lake is to the
north, and in the south right adjacent is Song Zhuang Museum. The site is
below the road level at south and east and surrounded by parapet at maximum 2m
high.
The building
massing was resolved into a U shape that recalls traditional triple house
courtyard familiar to the local people. The courtyard faces a road on the east
side and provides entries to the main exhibition spaces. There is an uninterrupted path from the road
level to the courtyard and then all the way to the roof, which facilitates
outdoor art display, draws activities in and blurs the boundary between roof
and facade.
Raised by 1.6m above the road level in the south and east, the courtyard is roof to the ground floor to be
entered from north and west. Two sunken gardens punctuate one level down to reach the earth,
allowing big trees to grow out, as well as providing natural light and
ventilation to the ground floor that holds some dark
spaces, a lounge, and several studios for resident artists.
The roof comprises a series of stepped terraces, and the
height difference allows skylight into major exhibition spaces in which the
ceiling profile corresponds to that of the roof. The spaces with various heights and
proportions allow flexibility in exhibiting art. Aluminum gridded hanging ceiling is chosen to
conceal structure, MEP equipment and integrate natural light and artificial
light into a uniformed materiality to achieve a clean, consistent and neutral
atmosphere optimized for showing art.
To receive outside views from inside was one of the
aspirations of the design. The views are
attentively revealed through a few precious protruding windows in the major
exhibition spaces, making room for one to contemplate
on the sight of reality before returning to art.
The exterior wall is applied with wall tile that is
economical and readily available in the local market, the tiling style, however, shows a refined materiality that is in contrast to the
surroundings, and further speaks of fluidity present in the spatial sequence of
the architecture.