• About
    • Legal
    • Press
    • Advertise
  • Contact
  • eMagazines
  • My Account
    • Login
    • Register
    • Forgot Password?
world-architects.com
Review
      • National/Regional Platforms
    • Office Profiles
      • Architects
      • Landscape Architects
      • Interior Designers
      • Engineers
      • Lighting Designers
      • Architectural Photographers
    • Projects
    • Reviews
    • Manufacturers
    • Jobs
      • Open Positions
      • Job Seekers
      • Publish a Position
    • Agenda
      • Events
      • Exhibitions
      • Lectures
      • Fairs + Conferences
      • Competitions + Awards
    • eMagazine
      • Current Issue
      • Archive
      • Imprint
      • German Issue
      • Swiss Issue
      • Subscribe
browse left
137 | 1186
browse right

From pigpen to pavilion

Almost half of the pig production worldwide takes place in China today. Until the 1990s, many families in the villages surrounding the cities produced pigs for their own consumption or for the local market. With the rapid urbanisation and the transformation of the villages into residential districts with a mixed population of artists, workers and pensioners, the pigpens cease to be used and pigs are now produced by a huge “pork-industry”.
The Shanghai based Atelier Archmixing recently transformed a former pigpen into an extra space for two adjoining courtyard houses in a village near Suzhou in Jiangsu Province. Orange trees on a small hill surround the walled space in which a 15-year-old orange tree and a 20-year-old Indian Lilac (Neem Tree) were saved.
The pigpen was demolished and the building material was fully reused for the irregular rectangular space. The bricks for the wall and the cobblestones for the base were composed into various patterns.
The slightly sloping roof parallels the gravelled ground in the original situation. An oval void is left out in the concrete roof plate around the two trees. From inside, the connection to nature is limited to the trees, the sky and the gravel. The brick walls with their own history are strongly present in the space.
The construction evokes a hybrid space between court, pavilion and garden by inverting traditional patterns of arrangement. Whereas the outer wall encloses the space, the only opening inside connects towards the sky and the trees.
The hybrid space concept is further enhanced by the materiality of the floor with simple gravel and the reuse of the old bricks. The concentration in materiality and in space arrangement reflects the search for a condensed atmosphere that keeps out the stress of the everyday urban surrounding.
The authenticity and pureness of material and the unconventional space arrangement are indicators of a new awareness of history and aesthetics. From the village path, the wall is painted white to meet the requirements of the historic preservation. Inside, the natural appearance of the materials is preserved.
The hybrid space nullifies the dichotomy between inside and outside. The authenticity of the material and the space concept refer to a new sensibility towards history and experience of the natural elements in the built environment. Atelier Archimix combined simple craft with a refined concept to turn a simple pigpen into a new space of contemplative experience.  
Eduard Kögel
Axis
Axis
Elevation
Elevation
Plan
Plan
Plan
Plan
Twin Trees Pavilion
2012

Suzhou, Jiangsu Province

Client
Zhang Hong

Architect
Atelier Archmixing

Design Team
Zhuang Shen
Tian Danni

Main Contractor
Wang Zikui

Program
Meeting and recreation

Gross Floor Area
56 sqm

Photographer
Tang Yu

browse left
137 | 1186
browse right
World - eMagazin
Bemis InfoShop reception desk & wall. Photo: Larry Gawel
Found
On the Virtues of Small Projects
Headlines
Is Charles Correa "India's Greatest Architect"?
A major RIBA exhibition in London presents the architect's five-decade-long career.
2013 Wheelwright Prize Winner
Brooklyn's Gia Wolff is the recipient of the first traveling fellowship open to architects outside of Harvard GSD since 1935.
Road Crew Destroys Mayan Pyramid
Workers in Belize partially destroyed a 2,300-year-old pyramid to use the crushed rock for road fill.
Nanne de Ru Appointed Director of The Berlage
The Dutch architect has been appointed Director of the Berlage Center for Advanced studies in Architecture and Urban Design at the Delft University of Technology.
Building
Robinson Nature Center
Insight
Selected News from Selected Architects
Film
Recent Work by Zimoun
Product
Messe Basel's Twisted Aluminum