View of the four studio-houses from the building complex entrance
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
Bird's eye view of the Education Forum at Dongqian Lake
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
View of the water-court and the kitchen from workplace on the 1st floor
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
09. The staircase in the living quarters
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
Load-bearing walls are pulled in from the glass enclosure of the house forming transitions between the rooms surrounded by a water court
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
Cruciform semi-outdoor space on the 1st floor
写真 © ©Li Keliang
Entrance of the House with Walkable Beam
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
View of studio interior from the porch
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
23. View from the walkable cruciform beam
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
Kitchen and dining area on the 3rd floor
© ©Tian Fangfang
29. Entrance of the House with Flipped Roof
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
Looking out through the porch with a glimpse of the gap between the roof and the 2nd floor
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
Bathroom of the House with Flipped Roof
写真 © ©Tian Fangfang
Architectural spaces molded by concrete poured in timber formwork From indoor to outdoor
写真 © ©Li Keliang
Site plan
図面 © ©FCJZ

Four Studio-Houses

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2022

An Education and Art Community
The Education Forum at Dongqian Lake in Ningbo is a community that includes a convention center, a hotel, an art museum, villas, and other facilities. The owner is passionate about education as well as art. A group of four studio-houses are built specifically to accommodate visitors, especially scholars or artists who may come for a relatively extended period of time to conduct research and/or work on creative projects.

Design as Research
Three of the four studio-houses were conceived by Yung Ho Chang without client nor site in the early 1990’s as an attempt to blur the line between Classicism and Modernism. These “paper architecture” are in fact serious investigations of a core issue of architecture – space – and buildable propositions as well. This particular history of the project makes these four pieces of architecture an engaging participant in the discussion and exchange of ideas on art and research at the Forum.

Prototyping Space
The studio-houses are meant as experiments to test out ways to organize architectural spaces. The openness of the work-live program allows us to produce four distinctly different spatial conditions. Designing space can never be separated from imagining experience as well as lifestyle.

The four studio-houses are thus named respectively after an architectural element that characterizes the spatial organization. They are House with Face-to-Face Loggias, House with Cruciform Glass, House with Walkable Beam, and House with Flipped Roof.

1.House with Face-to-Face Loggias
During design, a symmetrical volume is imagined being sliced in the middle and pulled apart to accommodate a pool flanked by two loggias on the ground level, one on each side. The two facing loggias define the open space in between framing both outdoor and semi-outdoor events.

The inhabitant needs to cross the water court from the living quarters to work in the study on the other side and then cross it again on the way back, which creates a ritual for daily living. Sitting in a loggia and talking to a friend is another pleasure the house offers. At that moment, the relationship of loggias morphs into that of people.

2.House with Cruciform Glass
On ground level, spaces are organized with a pinwheel formation; on the upper level, a transparent volume is divided into four equal quarters for living, cook/dining, sleeping, and bathing by a hollow cruciform double curtain wall that connects the second-floor to the ground below.

The space in the upper floor glass house is simultaneously open and divided. The inhabitant may move along the outer glass curtain wall enjoying a panoramic view of the surrounding water court, which is only punctured by the sceneries through the cuts in the peripheral wall.

3.House with Walkable Beam
A double-height space for plastic art studio is bookended with two oversized porches and floats in the middle a cruciform beam that is walkable.

The inhabitant’s creative process unfolds around the beam: standing on it to examine his/her art on the walls or underneath, hanging from it work-in-progress, or crossing it on his/her way to the library.

4.House with Flipped Roof
A single space is divided by an inverted sloped roof into two zones, one for work and one for live.

This inhabitant lives and works in the same space, almost. Visually, live and work areas on opposite sides of the inverted roof have limited connection yet whichever side the inhabitant is on he would be constantly aware of the other. Studio-house juxtaposes combination and separation.

Materiality
Reinforced concrete is used like clay to mold pure spaces. The textured surface of the exposed concrete poured in timber formwork is intended to avoid abstraction and give expression of tangibility to the spaces.

Project Info
Client: Ningbo Huamao Education and Culture Investment Co., Ltd Location: Ningbo, Zhejiang, China Principal Architects: Yung Ho Chang, Lijia Lu Project Team: Liang Xiaoning, Huang Shuyi, Wu Zhuqing, Han Shukai, Zhang Min, He Zelin Design Management: Zhejiang Huazhi Architectural Design Co., Ltd Collaboration: China Shanghai Architectural Design & Research Institute Co., Ltd Site Area:3900m2 Building Area: 1255m2 Structure: Reinforced Concrete Design Period: 2013-2016 Completion Time: 2022

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