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Key Dates

18 January - Launch Deadline
25 April - Standard Deadline
27 June - Late Deadline
19 July - Judging
7 August - Winners Announced

 
Image Credit : BIJISPACE

Project Overview

The design team believes that design should not blindly follow trends but should return to an understanding and contemplation of the essence of residence, rooted in the local context, integrated with nature, and constructing a living space that provides comfort to its inhabitants. After more than a year of meticulous craftsmanship, the design team has deconstructed and reorganized elements from various aspects such as size, environment, architectural structure, interior space, material selection, and the presentation of culinary arts. The design infuses emotions of home and depicts the traces of time.

Organisation

GROWTO DESIGN

Team

Zheng Jun, Liu Yanni, Li Zixu, Fan Li, Luo Yue

Project Brief

The negative second-floor atrium directly links to the first-floor garden, exploring variations in vertical space and expressing different scenes in the natural world through the shaping of sunken spaces and controlled scales. It also follows a meandering path in the horizontal plane, using modern design language to explore the essence of traditional gardens.
The first-floor space continues the formal language and order of the main space. The design rearranges the relationships between architectural surfaces to allow uniform diffusion of natural light. The regular and orderly play of light and shadow relaxes the mind and fills the space with an elegant atmosphere that intertwines classical and modern elements. The diversified scenes add a sense of ritual to life, with a semi-open layout that seamlessly aligns with daily life patterns.
The second-floor space, serving as the children's bedrooms and recreational areas, is imaginative and artistic. The public area is not just a single leisure and entertainment space but also a scene for children to vent, explore, and create. The free layout respects the potential for children's growth. Playful colors radiate a caring warmth, opening the door to a fairy-tale forest in children's hearts, allowing them to unleash their nature and immerse in imagination.
Moving upward, the transitional space of the third-floor master bedroom and living area tends to be quiet and private. The artistic tension reveals the elegant humanistic atmosphere of this home, where life resonates with beauty, providing a sense of belonging to the soul.

Project Need

A central courtyard garden vertically traverses the space from the first floor to the negative second floor, horizontally connecting functional spaces such as the living room, tea room, bar area, and art hall. The spaces are interconnected, creating a balanced and flexible arrangement. The stillness of the landscape complements the dynamism of the space, blending architecture and nature, extending into a novel experience that integrates Eastern, natural, and minimalist elements. This design exudes both majestic tension and delicate tranquility, creating a rich sensory experience and a compelling emotional impact.
The subtle connections between spaces and between indoor and outdoor areas outline a relaxed and comfortable atmosphere for the homeowners' entertaining scenes. The vibrant living scenes originate from a precise insight into real life. Grilles captures and masters the relationship between "concealed or revealed," completing the poetic transition between reality and imagination.

Design Challenge

From the beginning of the design, the underground levels have incorporated light wells, forming a "Four Waters Return to the Hall" courtyard. The sunken courtyard cleverly conceals the tangible "domains" of space, achieving a state of "separation without isolation, boundary without confinement" between nature, architecture, and the interior, allowing a sense of natural tranquility and simplicity within a defined space.

Sustainability

The design team places great emphasis on the naturalness of the space. Therefore, in the design, by adjusting the building structure, creating daylighting wells and underground gardens, and fully utilizing the flow and superposition of natural wind and light, the entire space presents a transparent, bright, and pure texture, while achieving green and low-carbon environmental value. In terms of energy sustainability, designers adopt a full-house recycling system to achieve the reuse of electricity and water. In addition, the original outer layer of the building and windows have been insulated, which not only improves sound insulation and heat insulation but also effectively reduces indoor energy consumption.




Open to all international projects this award celebrates innovative and creative building interiors, with consideration given to space creation and planning, furnishings, finishes, aesthetic presentation and functionality. Consideration also given to space allocation, traffic flow, building services, lighting, fixtures, flooring, colours, furnishings and surface finishes.  


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