Qionglai Bamboo Pavilion / UNO Architects

Qionglai Bamboo Pavilion is located in a small traditional rural community at the north end of the Baimo river bridge, next to over 100,000 acres of bamboo forest. For hundreds of years, Linpan settlements have been traditional rural communities in the western part of Sichuan. Often covered by woods, especially groups of bamboo, Linpan is an organic combination of woods, fields, houses, and water, it’s a reflection of the harmonious relationship between land and its people. That’s why famous local poet Su Shi from Song Dynasty said: “Better having no meat in eating, than having no bamboo in living.” 

Suzhou Bache Community Center / Dedang Design

"Let's make a roof where we can see the sunset and the Grand Canal", a simple and slightly exciting sentence when the site was first surveyed in the spring of 2020, sent a beautiful vision of the community center at the beginning of the design. Located on the old street of Bache in Wujiang, Suzhou, just a ten-minute walk from the canal, the community center is actually the first in a series of micro-renewals of the old street. The main motivation for the micro-renewal of the street was the upcoming completion of the future campus of Soochow University across the canal, and the leader proposed to turn Bache Street into an Academy Town, expecting the future students to become a new force in the street, bringing new opportunities for the renewal of the street. With such expectations, the small community center, as a public activity space, becomes a key vehicle for the integration of the old and the new, and it is no exaggeration to say that a small building takes on a big mission. We often joked later that this was a house with ambition.

Turramurra Threads House / Benn & Penna Architecture

Located in Turramurra NSW, amidst a plethora of existing heritage residences, Turramurra Threads sees the revitalization of an existing Victorian cottage into a contemporary, yet considerate family home. The original street-facing facade was repaired, with only a glimpse of the two new contemporary rear pavilions offered from the street.

K/door House / Yutarou Ohta

Renovation of a private house deep in the mountains of Gunma Prefecture. The house is for a young couple who moved from the city. They chose to renovate a 60-year-old two-story wooden house because they wanted to enjoy their life in this area more than its performance since their life in the area is limited. Although deep in the mountains, the house was surrounded by dense greenery and was dimly lit even in the daytime due to the short distance between neighboring buildings in the residential area.

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