Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

A triangulated glass and steel restaurant sits beside a river in a remote forested gorge in southern China.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Designed by Liu Chongxiao, the Tianmen Mountain Restaurant is located at the foot of a ravine leading down from the top of a mountain popular with sightseers.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

The restaurant is constructed from triangular panels of alternating timber and glass strips that allows diners a view of the surrounding landscape.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

The building is raised off the ground on steel feet to prevent flooding and gives access to the river via an external staircase.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Tianmen Mountain forms a national forest park near the town of Guilin and also contains a historic temple.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Other mountainside projects from the Dezeen archive include a red-striped health centre in the Spanish Sierra de Gardor mountains, a concrete house in the Alps and a steeply pitched house in the Pyrenees.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Photography is by Deng Xixun, Liu Chongxiao, He Rong and Song Ya.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Here’s some more information from the architect:


Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Located on riverside opposite the peach blossom island which is a fantastic sight point in Tianmen Mountain scenic of Guilin, the restaurant was oriented not as a building but a special viewfinder.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

The concept is to create unique experience through combine the natural environment with the manmade boundary surface.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

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The 627-square-meters interior space contains repast space, kitchen and toilet. The ground floor is elevated to respond the change of water levels.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

On the restaurant’s interior, the steel beams support roof and the beams also accommodate several strip -shaped clerestory windows which bring in natural light and view from outside. A series of different shaped shelves made of local fir looks warm and vernacular. The building looks like a super window for overall view.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Observing the exterior facade of the building from various angles, through the architectural interplay of composition of solid and void, one could sense a mixture of architectural exterior membrane interacting with the nearby bamboo grove, mountain and the materiality of interior space.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Once entering the building, one’s perception is surrounded by the combined power of building materiality, natural lighting and adjacent landscape. This new sense is generated by the juxtaposition of the building merging with the natural surroundings.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

While the rain falling in drops, there was a soft, hushed secondary light around the warm interiority which constructed by fir, and the beautiful scene of river rise gleaming…Everything, the water, the air, sound, material presences, textures…calmed people’s heart. The sense of expectation that filled them while they were sitting there.

Tianmen Mountain Restaurant by Liu Chongxiao

Architect: Liu Chongxiao
Client: Guilin Zijiang Danxia Tourism Co. LTD
Location: Guilin, China
Planning team: Jiang bo, Mo Keli, Wang Chao
Design team: Liu Chongxiao, Li When, He Rong, Fan Yi, Zhang Yue, Wu Xi, Ren Sijie
Project area: 627 square meters
Project Year: 2011


See also:

.

House at Punta Chilen
by dRN Architects
Hiding in Triangles by
Schambelan and Fromm
Barceloneta Market
by MiAS Architects

Frozen Wave

Après Carving The Mountains, le réalisateur espagnol Juan Rayos exprime une nouvelle fois son amour pour le longboard avec cette création “Frozen Wave”. Du skate, du soleil et de la musique qui forment ensemble une vidéo réussie. A découvrir en vidéo dans la suite.



frozen-wave3

frozen-wave2

frozen-wave1

Previously on Fubiz

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Brewster’s Discovery Walkway by Sturgess Architecture

Brewster’s Discovery Walkway by Sturgess Architecture

Canadian firm Sturgess Architecture have designed a glass viewing platform to cantilever over a glacial valley in the Columbian Icefields of Jasper National Park in Alberta, Canada.

Brewster’s Discovery Walkway by Sturgess Architecture

Called Brewster’s Discovery Walkway, the project also involves creating a 400 metre walkway in the mountainside.

Brewster’s Discovery Walkway by Sturgess Architecture

Sturgess Architecture won the competition in collaboration with engineers RJC and construction company PCL.

Brewster’s Discovery Walkway by Sturgess Architecture

The project is due to open to the public early next year.

Brewster’s Discovery Walkway by Sturgess Architecture

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Here’s a little bit of text from Sturgess Architecture:


Sturgess Architecture, RJC and PCL teamed up to design the winning competition for Brewster’s newest tourist attraction in Alberta, Canada.

Overlooking the Sunwapta Valley along the Columbian Icefields in Alberta, Canada, the Discovery Walk is envisioned as an extension of the landscape; one that projects from the shear face of the mountainside to not only shelter and educate visitors, but to expose and astound them. The project weaves a continuous thread of experience through unified geometric and material forms, defining the Discovery Walk not only as a singular destination, but as a catalyst and gateway where guests experience the untouched environment in a way they never have before.


See also:

.

Top of Tyrol by
Astearchitecture
Hiding in Triangles
clifftop hotel for Italy
Trestles Beach footbridge
by Dan Brill Architects

Mestia Airport by J. Mayer H.

Mestia Airport by J. Mayer H.

Berlin architects J. Mayer H. have completed this airport building in the medieval mountain town of Mestia, Georgia.

Mestia Airport by J. Mayer H.

The building comprises two branches that curve up towards the sky and serves the local ski resort.

Mestia Airport by J. Mayer H.

More about J. Mayer H. on Dezeen »

Here are some more details from the architects:


New Airport Building in Mestia, Giorgia

The new built airport is part of Georgia’s ambitious plans to develop tourism in Mestia.

Mestia Airport by J. Mayer H.

The beautiful medieval town with its stone defensive towers is part of UNESCO’s list of World Heritage Sites and also famous as ski-resort. With the unveiling of the airport on December 24th the building was designed and constructed within 3 months.

Mestia Airport by J. Mayer H.

J. MAYER H. Architects
Project Team: Juergen Mayer H., Jesko Malkolm Johnsson-Zahn, Hugo Reis, Mehrdad Mashaie, Max Reinhardt

Project: October – December 2011
Completion: December 2010
Client: Tbilisi International Airport

Architect on Site: Beka Pkhakadze


See also:

.

Arctic Circle Airport by Narud Stokke Wiig and HapticAeroport Lleida-Alguaire
by b720 Arquitectos
Lublin International
Airport by Are

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Geneva studio Clavienrossier created this home in the Swiss Alps by adding two tinted concrete volumes atop the remains of a stone house and adjacent barn.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

The project is located in Charrat in the Valais canton of Switzerland and involved demolishing much of the existing structure while retaining the original cellars and floors.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

The two concrete additions have faceted walls, angled inwards towards an opening in each side.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Rooms in the new upper storeys are connected, with circulation around the edge of each volume.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Photographs are by Roger Frei.

Here are some more details from the architects:


Situated away from the village, this house included an adjacent barn and had a too vast volume to be renewed in its totality.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Only elements which can easily be reused were preserved, cellars and floors of the pre-existent house. The rest was demolished.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Volumes of visible tinted concrete replaced the double-sided roof and the transformed area.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

The big openings so created allow the light to penetrate more generously.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

The geometry of the superstructures results both from a formal desire and from a will to remove the wall thickness.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

The various-slopes faces enhance the highly varied game of the shadows throughout the day. There are no corridors.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Circulation is made along the external wall, from room to room.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

The overall view continues beyond the windows, opening onto the surrounding landscape.

Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

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Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

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Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

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Charrat Transformation by Clavienrossier

Click for larger image


See also:

.

Trufa by
Anton García-Abril
House in the Pyrenees by Cadaval & Solà-MoralesRibbon House by
G2 Estudio

Awesome buildings in crazy places

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Found this article on Architonic, some rad architecture on the sides and tops of mountains.