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Wutopia Lab designs China's first all carbon-fiber installation in the rural area of Zhejiang
China Architecture News - Aug 28, 2019 - 04:56 11668 views
Chinese architecture firm Wutopia Lab has designed a red-colored triangle robotically woven carbon-fiber installation, which is China's first all carbon-fiber structure in the rural area of Zhejiang, in collaboration with digital construction team RoboticPlus.AI.
Named Shrine of Whatslove, the installation aimed to arouse discussion on what’s love in modern life and how to intervene the rural construction.
"Our client, Fengyuzhu commissioned us to design something for their first Cultural and Creative Complex, Fangyukong guesthouse project," said Wutopia Lab.
Other than hotel, restaurant or bookstore, Wutopia Lab chose to bring out a building that can inspire people to think on daily issues. It is quite popular to spend the weekend in the countryside near a big city recent days.
The essence is to pursue being in a new environment, far from anxiety in reality. But once the novelty has passed, no matter where he is, topic of health, education, work, and wealth will drown him again. Of course, love and marriage are the hottest topics that have been our confusion or pain for thousands of years.
"Love should be a beautiful and pure thing, but in reality it is always wrapped in layers of matter. I first formed the building directly with integrated triangle," added the studio. "The triangle as a motif also represents the original architectural prototype, shape of the shed built by ancestors."
The firm decided to abandon materiality. Giving up concrete, steel, glass or wood to build the knot, inspired by the "Zhusiyingshe" a Chinese traditional culture wrapping red line around the idol for good luck, we used a red line to weave a shrine. The shrine is more a visual image of a red line than a physical space, it does not need to shelter from the wind.
The 4 meters high and 3.8 meters wide entire structure of the shrine was weaved with a continuous line of carbon-fiber, density is controlled at 18kg per cubic meter and the bearing capacity of 400kg is achieved.
After a month of testing, using 7200 meters of continuous carbon fiber bundles, the red Shrine of Whatslove was completed in 90 hours. Yes, Shrine of Whatslove is not the same as the carbon-fiber pavilion you used to see. The installation has floor slabs that can carry at least 4 people and can be overhanged so that the shrine seems floating in the air.
Standing by the main entrance of Fangyukong Guesthouse, the red triangle shrine is like a guide post. You can see it as a start point of Wutopia Lab’s practice in countryside. "To real rejuvenate countryside, we need a cultural structure that transcends the city," explained the firm.
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Image courtesy of Wutopia Lab
Project facts
Project Name: Shrine of Whatslove
Design Firm: Wutopia Lab
Chief Architect: YU Ting
Project Architect: Liran SUN
Client: Fengyuzhu
Project: The Cultural and Creative Complex of Fangyukong Guesthouse/ Drifting Cloud
Digital Construction: RoboticPlus.AI(Kuan-Ting LAI, Zhe LIANG, PeiYi HUANG, Zixun HUANG, Yuhong HA)
Structural Consultant: Structure AND Architecture OFFICE (Zhun ZHANG)
Lighting Consultant: Chloe ZHANG
Location: Qinglongwu, Tonglu, China
Area: 6.8 sqm
Material: Carbon fiber
Project Year: 2019.03
Video: Fengyuzhu
All images © CreatAR Images unless otherwise stated.
All drawings © Wutopia Lab
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