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Sky Yard Hotel by Domain Architects

A concealing and revealing traditional Chinese garden experience

Sky Yard Hotel by Domain Architects
Photography by © Chao Zhang

Domain Architects recently completed their latest design project: Sky Yard Hotel. The design of the boutique hotel explores the possibility of reinventing traditional Chinese garden experience through the “lifting” concept. Take a look at the complete story after the jump.

Sky Yard Hotel by Domain Architects
Photography by © Chao Zhang

From the architects: Surrounded by unfinished building site, wasted land and industrial sites, this project is definitely not blessed with a beautiful site. This hotel near a scenic area consists of 48 rooms, an independent restaurant, a banquet hall, swimming pools, underground parking and spaces preserved for later phase development. The site area, construction budget and time are also extremely tight and limited. Fortunately, Taihang Mountain is still visible from the site.

Sky Yard Hotel by Domain Architects
Photography by © Chao Zhang

Usually a hotel room would be designed as an outward box to maximize the view. Consequently, a typical hotel building would be a collection of opened boxes.

We rejected this conventional model and went back to the starting point of design: the room experience. We reinvented the actual experience in a typical unit: first, the exterior view below eye-level is blocked, while the view above is left open; then the opening is “lifted” or enlarged to invite more light and air; at last, full-size glass doors divided the unit into a combination of interior room and exterior micro courtyard, while the boundary in between is highly blurred.

Sky Yard Hotel by Domain Architects
Photography by © Chao Zhang

With imperceptible boundaries and a visually continuous experience, the beautiful, scroll-like view of the sky and the mountain powerfully draws attentions. During different times in a day, the sunlight interacts with the curved wall of the opening in different ways, producing dramatic and moving atmosphere.

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The building is elevated by half-floor to perfectly meet the complex demands of pedestrian and car circulation. The lawn in front of the building is also “lifted”, providing sloped paths for entrance.

Sky Yard Hotel by Domain Architects
Photography by © Chao Zhang

The lifted ground forms abstract image of mountains, echoing the view of the real mountain farther away. Forming an abstracted version of mountain not only complies with Chinese garden making traditions, but also leads to mass balance by the reuse of the excavated masses on site. Looking out from the first floor, the transparent glass windows surrounded by translucent glass frame the view of the front yard and the mountain far away.

Photography by © Chao Zhang
Photography by © Chao Zhang
Photography by © Chao Zhang
Photography by © Chao Zhang
Photography by © Chao Zhang
Sky Yard Hotel by Domain Architects
Photography by © Chao Zhang

The strategy of “lift” is also applied to interior design: from the circulation routes in public area of the first floor, to the signage of room numbers on guest floors. Even the counter desk in the restaurant and the drawer handles in the rooms are also formed by the motion of “lifting”.

Using a very simple and consistent method, we invented a “room + micro-yard” model for hotel design, and transformed the disadvantage of the site into a pleasantly unfamiliar and distinctive experience. Devoid of superficial visual elements of Chinese or local culture, Sky Yards evokes the traditional Chinese garden making methodology of concealing and revealing.

General Information
Project Name: Sky Yards Hotel
Architecture Firm: Domain Architects – domain-architects.com
Firm Location: Shanghai, China
Completion Year: 2020
Gross Built Area: 4900m2
Project location: Xiuwu County, Henan Province, China

Credits
Lead Architects: Xiaomeng Xu
Design Team: Xiaomeng Xu, Chun Wang
Interior Design: Xiaomeng Xu, Hannah Wang
Landscape Design: Xiaomeng Xu
Graphic Design: Xiaomeng Xu, Hannah Wang
Structural Consultant: AND Office
Construction Document: Henan Urban & Rural Design Institute
Contractor (Structure): Local Team
Contractor (Architecture and Landscape): Henan Jutailong Decoration and Construction Co., Ltd.
Photo credits: Chao Zhang

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