Portfolio 2017 Chan Hiu Fung

Page 1

Chan Hiu Fung

Portfolio

ARCHITECTURE & URBANISM

2017



Chan Hiu Fung Portfolio Architecture & Urbanisam


e: nickfungchan@yahoo.com.hk t: (852) 60932684


contents

about me curriculum vitae

I 6 19 34 45 60

89 91 93

1 2

master of science in Sustainable Architecture of Multi-Scale Project

a reclaimed realm matter matters the (un)finished plan the invisible skyscraper(s) the urban earthworm

II

professional practices

III

bachelor of science in architecural studies

cloud eco-village buddhism museum

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about me

It has been around 10 years since I was introduced to architecture, still I find great curiosity and motivation in the working towards the betterment of people’s life in various ways. When I chose to carry out my graduate studies in Italy, a place of which language I don’t speak, culture unfamiliar, I was prepared to learn. Everything about an architecture has to address problems that are real beyond our imagination to the people that we supposedly design. And it can only be done by pushing the extra mile to stipulate the foundation of a good project in regards to realistic circumstances. A good reference to real life is the experience of having to always work in a group, which calls for great organisation, communication and understanding, considered everyone has different educational and cultural backgrounds. Perseverance is underrated, whether it is during study or while working on a professional project, we just have to believe that there is always a better solution.

1

NAME Hiu Fung CHAN DATE AND PLACE OF BIRTH 28/ 10/ 1987, Hong Kong NATIONALITY Chinese PHONE NUMBER +852 6093 2684 E-MAIL nickfungchan@yahoo.com.hk SKYPE nickfungchan@yahoo.com.hk ADDRESS RM 1312, TAK ON HOUSE, HAU TAK ESTATE, JUNK BAY, KOWLOON, HONG KONG LANDGUAGES Cantonese English Mandarin Japanese French Italian

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curriculum vitae

EDUCATION 2014-2016 Politecnico Di Milano, Master of Architecture, Milan, Italy ( DISTINCTION ) 2006-2010 City University of Hong Kong, Bachelor of Architecture, Hong Kong, China 1999-2006 St. Francis Xavier’s College, Hong Kong, China WORK EXPERIENCE 2014 Architectural Assistant, Spence Robinson Limited, Hong Kong 2012 Graduate Architects, Woodsbagot Asia Limited, Hong Kong 2011 Architectural Designer, Vpang Architects Limited, Hong Kong 2010 Architectural Designer, SLHO & Associates Limited, Hong Kong 2008 Internship, EDGE Design Institute Limited, Hong Kong COMPETITIONS / AWARDS 2014 Gold-PoliPiacenza 2014 Scholarship, Politecnico Di Milano 2010 Thematic Pavillion For Expo 2012 Yeosu, International Competition 2010 Open Building, International Competition 2009 Central Glass International Architectural Design Competition 2009 Tsim Sha Tsui Pier Plaza, Local Design Competition 2009 Design in Teheran, International Competition 2008 Built-Expo, City University of Hong Kong, ( WINNER ) RESEARCH 2016 Unbuilding Hong Kong: Public space in highly urbanized cities 2010 Exploration and Encounter: Visitors Experience in Daniel Libeskind Museum WORKSHOPS 2015 Gentrification, Sociology of Urban Space, Ranci Ortigosa Costanzo 2015 Feeding (the) Landscape, OC Summer School 2015 2014 Cave in Cadiz, Urban Design for Public Spaces, Pico Valimaña Ramón Antonio SOFTWARE / SKILLS AutoCad +++++ 3D Max +++++ Revit ++ SketchUp +++++ Rhino + + Adobe Illustrator ++++ Adobe Photoshop +++++ Adobe InDesign ++++ Blender + + Physical Modelling ++++ Freehand Drawing +++

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I


Master of Science in Sustainable Architecture of Multi-Scale Project 2014-2016



A Reclaimed Realm

“ The process of re-evaluation on the old buildings is to draw people’s attention to the businesses that are already struggling to compete beyond the ground floor, to inject values into the community, and to help them escape the fate of being bulldozed and replaced. ”

Professors:

Hervé Dubois

Location:

Tsim Sha Tsui, Hong Kong

Team:

Yim Siu

6


urban bipolarity

A new kind of urbanism- manipulative, dispersed, and hostile to traditonal public space - is emerging both at the heart and at the edge of town in megamalls, corporate enclaves, gentrified zones, and pseudohistoric marketplaces. It marked the beginning of the realization that public space was being stealthily privatized and commodified.

50s BLOCK

7

60s SHADOW BLOCK

70s HYPER BLOCK

A LOOK TO THE DENSITY

It comes as no surprise that most would recognize Hong Kong as a vertical city, and are fascinated by the round-the-clock ethics and its ‘concrete jungle’ physique. However, 75 per cent of its land is made up of rural areas and the entirety of 7 million people has to cram into just a fraction of the city, bringing us a population density of 25,600 per square kilometers.

The chronological transformation of building typologies in Hong Kong is a tell-all of how a group of people had sacrificed their cultural and historical heritage in exchange for shinier things. The fact that a 30-floor skyscraper with 100% ground floor site coverage and a 7-floor pre-war building could seemingly co-exist in the busiest of city center is an act of monopoly for futilely, some years soon, the little ones will cease to exist.

80s PODIUM BLOCK

90s - NOW HYPER PODIUM WITH TOWERS


8


perceived realm of exploration

Manipulation of this social psychology has led to many successes in the cloaking of public spaces, both by the public and private sector. The only way to provide for a better urban experience is therefore to implement the reciprocal mentality - to amplify the welcoming clues within the pedestrians’ limits of visual field.

Paris

Hong Kong

Supply of explorable area (PLINTH)

Normal Visual Field Visual Field with framing device like trees, awnings billboards, verandas An active plinth is also desirable from the psychological standpoint of the pedestrian. People are naturally drawn to places where an array of activities is on public display. Through the careful placement of urban furniture such as trees and awnings, the visual field could be refined into a designated zone. When what one can see is filled with active plinth, the street archieves an equilibrium state embracing ‘an attractive character’, ‘continuity’ and is mutually beneficial to both pedestrains and businesses.

PARIS Typical section of secondary roads on a neigborhood scale

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In Paris, plinth seldom goes beyond the ground floor. In Hong Kong, nominal height of plnth is 15m. Relaxed sensory environment Beyond saturation Saturation Sensory overload and confusion Plinth not getting exposure

HONG KONG Typical section of secondary roads on a neigborhood scale


compete or commune

BUILDING SEMANTICS In Hong Kong, honoring the position of being the world’s freest economy, people get to throw out buildings like soup from yesterday when they are not making enough money. Buildings of different era, scale, colors and functions standing side-by-side like ant and elephant are as natural as it gets without the, at times needed interventions from the authority. Co-existence of veranda type and podium type on the same street, despite their obvious differences, are commonly found in every urban centers of Hong Kong. VERANDA BUILDINGS The continuous belt of shops on the ground floor, together with the hybrid zone cultivated under the veranda, create an ideal public realm where haggling activities are on display, where locals exchange news of the day and workers upload their goods on a daily basis. PODIUM BUILDINGS Obsessed with cleanliness, any temporary fixtures placed near the perimeter of the building are swiftly removed by the management team. The ‘privately owned public space’ that the developer has agreed to provide could be on the podium level where the public has very little access, or they can be inlaid into the internal.

TYPICAL TYPES OF BUILDING IN HONG KONG Veranda Type vs Podium Type

On the verge of seeing these historical buildings completely disappear, we must review our options of bringing them on par again with the kind of urbanity that will work against the impediment of street life and celebrate the freedom in public realm.

SEMI-OPEN SPACE DISTRIBUTIONN Veranda Type vs Podium Type

10


alley of autonomy

It is a common scene throughout Hong Kong where retractable stalls occupy the alleys and back lanes, appropriating the ‘forgotten corner’ once again with their specialized trades. Managed by citizens, these stalls had filled in and administer a stronghold of continuity on street level. These in-between spaces displayed an organic beauty in freedom, tied the community closer and kept the alleys safe.

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01 LATENT LAYERS

02 TECHNICAL SUBTRACTION

Back lanes Existing podium platform

Structural Frame Circulatory Core Subtractable Unit

03 INTERACTION WITH NEIGHBORS

04 MOTIVATION FOR SUBTRACTION

Action Reaction Low levels setback to extend open space High levels setback to create views and ventilation

Integrated POPS Floor area compensation

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01 A symbosis of the old and the new, a correction to insensitive planning, re-propered through a new network of public spaces 02 A proper public domain free from the corperate decree, more interactve activities can now be accomodated in the widened back lanes 03 Moderated spectatorship provides safety and trust within the neighborhood 04 Multi-leveled plinth of no more than 15m, reveals forgotten venues by elevated looking platforms 05 Three dimensional public space that are physically and visually accessable is installed through subtraction


01

02

03

04

05

14


15


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The notion of two dissimilar organisms co-existing in intimate association – a symbiosis is always a better solution than the destruction of either party.

URBAN DEMOCRACY The project’s aim of joining two disparate building typologies into a balanced union is an attempt to ‘keep’ rather than ‘spend’. It crosses the matter of sustainability, whereas taking down buildings generates construction wastes by the tons; it also posts a question to our mentality, and to our democracy. Measuring city and architecture solely by their monetary values does not bring prosperity; instead it sought despair from the mass. The quality of public realm, public space is instead a better indicator of people’s general happiness, with largely universal parameters: visual clarity, accessibility, inter-visibility and level of mass involvement.


14


MATTER MATTERS

“ Whilst today our public realm is shifted heavily into the virtual world, it was merely an indicator that says our physical public space is not good enough. We are still by and large physical beings, who rely heavily on public space and social interactions to abide to the better values in our society.”

Professors:

19

Hervé Dubois Massimo Galluzzi Stefano Di Vita

Location:

Belleville, Paris

Team:

Jin Sihuan Yim Siu



between neighborhoods

Our goal is to decode the distinctiveness into an understandable language and formulate them into a new play with great characters that make sense to our generation. Understanding Neighborhoods

Belleville

In-Between

Place des Fetes

Legend of Qualities

Institution/ Public Buildings

Separate Programming

190 190

21

Residential

long street - Boring

Shops/ Workshops

Under- ultilised Public Space


the urban matrix

open space

shops/ workshop crossing time crossinga

190

23

24

66

material

scale

22


principle of transformation

01 URBAN CONNECTIONS

LATERAL SPACE DEFINITION

1:1 GO

1:2 / 1:3 STAY

PATH IMPROVEMENT

02 IDENTIFY THE BOUNDARIES PATH FRAMING

SEPARATION WITHOUT FENCES

BUFFERING BOUNDARIES

PLA

CONNECTION OF URBAN VOID

CRT

SHP

03 BUFFER BETWEEN PUBLIC AND PRIVATE

SHP

CONNECTION OF URBAN VOLUME

NOD

RES ATE

CRT

private courtyard

ATE

private

RES

atelier / workshop

buffer zone between public / private

urban node

shop

public

plaza

23

NOD

residential

PLA

+


commune to connect

BELLEVILLE

PLACE DES FETES

Private Courtyard

PLACE DES FETES

Community Medical Centre

Community Exhibition Centre

Semi- Private Open Space

BELLEVILLE

Workshop Space for Residents

Regenerated Arcade

24


proportion / orientation

1 Offset by 4-6m from edge to sculpt a buffer zone from built volume to void space and a cutoff line parallel to main building faรงade to emphasize focus

2 Connecting one public space to another, shapes are mapped out to suggest which way to go

3 Potential stagnant area (!!!) from blank walls assess the directions for diners will face

25


soft landscape / hard landscape

4 Using darker, slightly reflective material to signal higher fluidity; rougher material to signal slower pace movements and encourage stay

5 Support the continuum of flow through level difference, in this case also serve as public seating

6 Trees are placed as an aid to soften the edge between private and public where platforms are not present, street lights are placed along the material change

26


bounded vs buffered

27


the reciprocal relation

New Passage to Plaza

Adaptive Galleria

Private Courtyard

Village Street

Community Garden

Private Courtyard

Adaptive Community Community Galleria Terrace Garden

Private Courtyard

New Passage

New Galleria

Private Courtyard

New Galleria

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Overview of Community Plaza

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30


31


Overview of Village Street

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THE (UN)FINISHED PLAN

“If urban fabrics are an enormous architecture unfold, each fabric must perform differently but still comes together as a whole.�

Professors:

Location: Team:

Vives Sanfeliu Lluis Chen Jun Ho Vecchi Giancarlo Badalona, Spain Tung Lam Nguyen Giorgio Pernasilici

34


fabric/ analogy

SITE

Our site stands between grounds of historical richness, as little as there were to look – mellow warehouses built of pure functional needs, narrow streets that are out of proportions, also out of proportions the thermal chimneys – any traces of absurdity is indispensable in en-thriving the area in its own characteristics. Contrast by the near regions of Barcelona and Badalona, an area that has not been purposefully planned for humanistic use is juvenile. But as much as the glorious dwellings on historical success press on – developments are optimized and visions are finite. As we look to the future, possibilities are innumerable. Necessary is an urban form that facilitates the notion of ‘capacity’ and ‘motivation’ for new programs to kick in. Centralized Open Space

Monumentation of Node

35

Transitional Open Space

Infiltrated Open Space

Disposition & Direction

Buffered Open Space

Placing at a Distance


mutation of grids

Nodes Existing building preserved for their architectural merits and new buildings conserving the industrial vibe

Lines Redefining the area as part of the surrounding fabric

Surfaces The latent network derived from the existing vacant ground surfaces, creating possible open spaces network.

+

+

+

36


fill in the blanks

Preservation & Revitalization

Fabric Deformation

Transition & Activation

Rhythmic Verticality

Unfinished Complexity

37

The idea of raising the unfinished tissues as the proposal of the Masterplan was intended to be sustained by the people. To allow the habitants to ‘fill in the blanks’, the borders of considerations has to be pushed into multiple dimensions from the perception of a single block to the perception of a cross-site axis; from visiting a facility to the sequence of land uses one experience in a trip, from visible to latent. The strategies are not mere layering of separate networks, but are generated one after another and all at the same time.



1/F PLAN

2/F PLAN

G’F PLAN

39

ROOF PLAN


40


Original node

41

Preserved structure and extension

Urban interaction


Connection surfaces

New structure

Programming

42


Sunbathing Ground

43

Exhibition Plaza


Occassiona Large Event Space

44


INVISIBLE SKYSCRAPER(S)

“ A building isn’t a building, she and they are going to be disappointed by the outcome. A skyscraper will introduce congestion, cast shadows, and interrupt quaint 19th-century views—in Paris or anywhere else in the world.”

Professors:

Location: Team:

45

Hervé Dubois Roy Nash Gianluca Vita 11e arrondissement, Paris Giorgio Pernasilici Elena Saccaperni Yim Siu



presence of landmarks

Landmarks connected with overlapping walking zones of D400

Landmarks connected by visual axis

Landmarks that fell into the visible zones of taller landmarks

47

An analysis of the abundance landmarks of Paris focuses on the presence of the structure projected to city strollers. Every landmark was marked with a D400 meter walkable zone presence. Structures that height over 35 meter were considered having a larger presence zone of D600 meter. While super structure Tour Eiffel and skyscraper Montparnasse projects presence zone of over 1 kilometer, meaning people approaching can feel the presnce of the landscape much earlier, implying the probability of exploring the surrounding area on foot.

MISSING LINK Through the analysis an isolated landmark is spotted - Church of ST. MAGARITE. Disconnected with its counterparts, an inactive district is spreaded under the bounds formed by connections of nearest landmarks.


finding the sites

Landmark Explorable Zone Physical Boundary Main Road / Connection Density Saturated Area

OVERLAYING LANDMARK AND DENSITY ANALYSIS

Unactivated Streets Activated Streets Secondary Road / Connection Density Saturated Area Main Road / Connection

MAPPING THE STREET POPULARITY

Density Saturated Area

Existing Landmark explorable zone New Skyscraper Explorable Zone Physical Boundary Main Road / Connection Density Saturated Area

COMPLETING THE MISSING LINK WITH 2 NEW SITES

48


The chosen site(s)

49

Unblocking the city strategically

Urban plaza for better connection


Subsidary connection for better access

Increasing interfaces by leveling the sites

Maximising distance to the skyscraper(s)

50


Residential Block

Stepped- Farming Block

Internal Viewing Deck

Sport Ground & Event Spaces

Neighborhooh Block Rebuild

Communal Plaza

51


Residential Block

Stepped Atrium Pool Deck

Outdoor Theatre

Plinth & Urban Connection

52


53


54



56


57




the urban earthworm

“Every week I have to wash my filthy curtains. But I can’t take my lungs to the dry cleaners, it is unrealistic to imagine that it might become a park. ’’

Professors: Location: Team:

Pessoa Pereira Sebastiano Citroni São Paulo, Brazil Haolin Wu Maria Anna Di Lorio Stephanie Bart-Mensah Yim Siu

60


Set Back at Road Junction

Community gardening

Skylight for under space

General Masterplan (Partial)

Section showing planters for gardening

61

Extension to neighboring unused site

Space for temporal activity

Set-back Vertical access from for street ground floor widening

TYPICAL SECTION 1:20


Section showing new skylight on the highway Glass Floor Construction Detail  Floor finish  Min. 1.5 clear containment  Sealant  24mm double glazing tempered glass

 Perimeter member  Aluminum Part

 

 Supporting Structure

Skylight Detail

62



Bridge Set Back at Road Junction

Overview of the Under Space of Highway

64


II


Professional Practice

2010-2014



Title Auckland Downtown Masterplanning Location Auckland, New Zealand Client Private design The Masterplan development has been informed by a thorough analysis of both the immediate and wider site; together with its physical, historic, cultural, demographic and commercial context. The Masterplan recognises the transformative potential and civic ambition contained in the 2012 Auckland City Centre Masterplan. The Downtown development is constrained by a number of significant factors - existing buildings (& their clients), adjacent assets, existing and proposed transport connections (Bus, Rail), planning controls and subterranean development (CRL).

68



Title Quanzhou 818 Master Planning Location Quanzhou, China Client Private Design The vision of the masterplan was to create a community identity that celebrates Quanzhou’s traditional architectural heritage with it’s modern skyline image. In the masterplan, a series of walkable neighbourhoods integrates with the public landscape in which commercial activity was also evolved alongside. The public open spaces here provide symbolic as well as functional importance to the network in order to encourage interaction and the sense of community.

70



Title Kunming Granduer Plaza Facade Design Location Kunming, China Client Private SCOPE This shopping mall facade design consists of elements like aluminium panels, perforated panels, footbridge, large projection screen, double height glazing facade, etc., the extensive combination of the above elements gave the project extra challenges in the detail design stage.

72



Title HANG LUNG CENTRE RENOVATION Location Wan Chai, Hong Kong Client Hang Lung Properties Design The renovation consists of the re-designed facede of Hang Lung Centre as well as a new proposal of the circulation that aimed to increase lettable area and add value to its physical presence.

74



Title Hong Kong (Various) District Sitting- Out Area Location Tai Wo Hau/ Lai King/ Yuen Long, Hong Kong Client Leisure and Cultural Services Department scope This project is under the District Minor Works Programme of LCSD, it includes documentation, design and project co-ordination between clients, contractors and engineers. Proposing the suitable fitness equipment, play equipments, benches as well as plants are also within the scope of this project.

76



Title Honk Kong Public Housing Redecoration Works Location 18 Public Housing Estates, Hong Kong Client Hong Kong Housing Authority partner Prudential Surveyors International Ltd scope The social significance of the outlook of public estate lies in the identity it gives to its residence and the color in specific, could have an impact on their psychological well-being. Montages using existing photos were to be made for every single faรงade and parapets alike in 18 estates over the course of one season. Each color scheme was approached by systematically generated palette and are finalised by representatives from the public sector.

78



Title Garden Terrace Podium Deck Design Location Mid- Level, Hong Kong Client Private Design The podium deck design was aimed to maximise the the usage of the exisitng deck area that left over from the dormination of the existing pool area. With the screening effect created by the plants, this small deck area was able to transform itself into a space that includes multi- zoning and privacy level, which hence accomodates more programmes for the future use.

80



Title Fine-dining Restaurant Bar Design & Build ‘Zummer Hideout’ Location Wan Chai, Hong Kong Client Private Design The duplex fine-dining experience was set to be part-French and part-Italian. Working with a tight budget, furnitures and fixtures from the previous rentee were up-cycled to contribute to the new western vibe. The project was overseed from design to the opening.

82



Title ERB Service Centre Location Tin Shui Wai, Hong Kong Client ERB Design This conceptual proposal for this job placement centre aimed to create an atmosphere that give hopes to the unemployed. The transparent design of the glass boxes as well as the half- height book shelves run through the whole centre that allows natural lighting penetrate into the central main circlation.

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Project Type

renovation

Title Competition ‘Hong Kong Art Centre Renovation’

Project Year

year-out

Involvement

team

Location Wan Chai, Hong Kong Design To refresh and transform the atrium, public spaces and galleries of the HKAC into a multi- functional, flexible, environmentally friendly and barrier free space which meets the public’s demands of contemporary arts and culture hub. Such design also take into consideration on both functional and aesthetic purpose.

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III


Bachelor of Science in Architectural Studies

2006-2010


Cloud

walkway bridge

building site

feature workshop entrance

The Architecture itself act as an “exhibit” to the visitors. By adopting the essence of the natural element - CLOUD, unpredictable routing are brought upon the visitors’ journey. The visitors are to find their ways around the centre, re-trace, and have ‘seen but not been’ experience. All these are attempts to call for a memorable visit, rather than a typically mundane education.

Original Site Condition walkway to building site to adjacent building

plaza cycling path

Dominant Pedestrian Flow exhibition hall A

exhibition hall B evaporation/exhibition

Building Mass Formation

condensation/ social

cycling path

exhibition corridor

centralized spatial connection 0 1 2

5

10m

ramp linked to

a

a

ex

po

d c

Building Mass Connection

G/F 0 2 5

89

f se

d

b

m

p

fro

m

wa

`

lk

1/F 10m

ra

a d

wa

f y

br

id

ge

e


a wondering process

social interaction

precipitation

evaporation/exhibition

condensation exhibition hall

exhibition hall

evaporation

hall of spirit

exhibition ramp

Conceptual Section evaporation

o cycling path

a Exhibition Hall g

b Service

g

c Foyer

g

ramp from G/F

d Hall of Spirit

d

e Viewing Platform e

R/F

f Void g

g Skylight

Exploded Axonometric Diagram

90


Spectator Stand

Exhibition

Flower Land

Workshop

Fruit Farm

Vegetable Farm Restaurant & Cafe

Hostel Market

Viewing Platform

Floating Market

Camping

Hiking Trail

Cycling Path

Tree House

Workshop

Eco - Village

Just as any typical development in Hong Kong, this reclaimed land also bear undulating terrain. The fundamental idea of the EcoVillage is to minimize intervention to the natural environment, take advantage and hatch. On that note, the main passageway is set to cross the plain axis of the site. Habitants fetch from the ease of access - opportunities for various designated programmes to thrive as the terrain builds up are granted - successive micro-developments are expected and overtime, mellow is the land adjacent to the main passageway, and new unexpected programmes would be generated.

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a sustainable life experience

Public Axis

Public Axis

Central Activity Pathway

Private Axis

Natural Interaction

Accommodation Zone

Agriculture Zone

Preparation

Water Body

Activity Promenade

Agriculture

Green Space

Cycling Path

Accommodation

Zoning

Natural Element

Pathways

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Buddhism Museum

Detaching the irregular space form to Emptiness

Growing your journey in a reciprocal visual arrangement

Irregular Space Form The whole exhibition centre can be read as a group of irregular space form linking together, through detaching the spaces sequentially, you will be able to go deeper into the knowledge of Buddhism.

Clue or Riddle In Buddhism, every living thing is actually undergoing a repetitive journey until achieving extrication. In showcasing this winding life journey, visual clue/ disturbance is set throughout the whole visiting experience, so as to increase the probability of route selection, and at the same time creating an unique journey for each visitor.

B

Section A-A’

Section B-B’

Gradual change of space volume to embrace the start of learning process

Steady form of space knowledge in Buddhism

5

10m

01 2

C

C

01 2

A

10m

A

5

B

C

A

01 2

A

C

B

B

93

B

A

C

C

A

B

Section C-C’ for

absorbing

Exaggerated space form for sharing and interaction

5

10m


calmness through chaos

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e: nickfungchan@yahoo.com.hk t: ( 852 ) 60932684




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