Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, FacadeTea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, Brick, Beam, ArchTea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, Bench, BeamTea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, BeamTea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - More Images+ 36

Ningde, China
  • Design Team: Yingnan Chu,Wenwu Wang,Mengjia Liu,Xinran He,Dan Xie,Xiaojuan Chen
  • Environmental Engineering Consultation: Nan Chen
  • Woven Arch Bridge Construction Consultation: Yan Liu
  • Bamboo Contractors: Anji Zhujing Bamboo Industry Technology
  • Client: Zhuguanlong township government
  • City: Ningde
  • Country: China
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Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, Facade
© Yingnan Chu

Text description provided by the architects. Zhuguanlong Township in Shouning County, Fujian Province of China, where the Tea Leaf Market is located, was a tea-rich but poverty-stricken region with vast tea fields and a moso bamboo forest in its mountains. To boost the local tea leaf trading economy, the government and villagers proposed a multi-functional tea leaf market near a bus stop. It could also provide the villagers with a quality public space for gathering, leisure activities, and sharing business opportunities. As a result, a big open space with a large span was built with local materials, craftsmen and building technologies. It could be flexibly used throughout the year with low maintenance costs. Apart from seasonal tea leaf trading, it can serve multiple public purposes. (farm produce trading, festival celebrations, weddings, funerals, outdoor film projection, and children's activities) 

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Image 32 of 41
Plan - Site
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, Facade, Garden, Beam
© Yingnan Chu
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, Windows
© Yingnan Chu

Traditional building technologies for wooden arch bridges (Traditional design and practices for building Chinese wooden arch bridges) have been carried forward since ancient times in Shouning County, (listed in UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage) with 19 wooden arch bridges preserved till now. Shouning County is one of the inheritance regions of wooden arch bridge building technologies and abounds in moso bamboo. We studied the prototype and traditional building technologies of wooden woven arches and proposed refined bamboo structures. Load tests were carried out to determine the structure’s maximum bearing capacity, and overlapped easily obtained small bamboo parts, which served as a substitute for timber ones (Bamboo is more light-weighted and easier to process than wood), to form identical units that were finally assembled into a woven bamboo roof with an 18-meter span. A roof has a smaller load than a bridge with an identical span).

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Image 41 of 41
recycled material in Construction
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, Brick, Beam, Arch
© Yingnan Chu
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, Beam
© Yingnan Chu

Since many villagers were well-trained for rammed earth buildings, which were common in the region. Tulou, a sort of earth building in Fujian Province, is built with traditional earth-ramming technologies and listed as World Cultural Heritage), an enclosure wall was built around the reinforced concrete structure at the building’s north side, where traditional earth-ramming technologies were applied. It served as both a cover for the main structure and a theme wall and screen between the exterior and interior. 

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography
© Yingnan Chu
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Image 34 of 41
Section
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, Beam, Column, Arch
© Yingnan Chu

Waste was turned into wealth - Discarded materials around the site were recycled, processed and re-utilized by local craftsmen. Going through a whole process of collecting waste materials. Rubble retrieved from demolished houses’ foundations; 2. Complete timber structural parts recycled from demolished dilapidated houses; 3. Leftovers from stone processing factories; 4. Discarded Shouning stone plates from the pavement.), discussing and experimenting on their utilization with local craftsmen:1. Recycled rubble was directly applied to foundations for buildings or landscape walls; 2. Recycled timber parts were processed into timber bricks or timber units for benches; 3. Leftovers from stone plates were processed into small pavement parts; 4. Smaller leftovers were broken into bits as terrazzo aggregate, and by applying them to the building, we finally reached the goal of obtaining materials within 20 kilometers of the site.

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, Brick
© Yingnan Chu
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, Beam, Column
© Yingnan Chu

Considering the environmental and social status of this underdeveloped region, we made sure a low-cost process of material obtaining, participation of local craftsmen and involvement of local technologies were implemented, so that the building could be deeply rooted here like a tree growing out from its soil, thus motivating the villagers to participate in and benefit from its construction. The large span has made it possible to turn the market into the community’s activity space [where farm produce trading, villagers’ conferences, extracurricular activities, weddings & funerals, and weekend films can take place during non-tea leaf trading seasons. Here villagers can take a break from their farmland work; children can draw or play games; tea leaves can be sun-dried at the front square. An open roof could boost natural ventilation and daylighting, reducing operational costs. Against the backdrop of the COVID-19 pandemic, it could be used for pandemic prevention coordination, nucleic tests and medical observation. 

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, Beam, Column
© Yingnan Chu
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, Beam
© Yingnan Chu

Long perceived as symbols of Chinese traditional culture, pavilions and towers are not necessarily enclosed; instead, quite a few of them are built with an open gesture, reflecting the concept of harmony between humans and nature, which has been deeply rooted in Eastern culture. The tea leaf market, though serving as a shelter against storms, features openness, too. The rammed earth walls, concrete structures and terrazzo floors are combined to present a sort of natural solidness while indicating human-nature harmony. The metal roof built with modern technologies is joined seamlessly with the light bamboo structure, guaranteeing both durability and climatic adaptability of the building.

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography
© Yingnan Chu
Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Interior Photography, Beam
© Yingnan Chu

The lightness and beauty of overhanging eaves of Chinese traditional buildings were described as “looking like stretched wings of beautiful birds” in Classic of Poetry, an ancient Chinese literature classic. And in the remote Zhuguanlong Township, this sort of lightness and beauty is reflected through the innate strength of raw bamboo. As the Chinese saying goes, “Weak birds fly first”. The soaring gesture of the market, which was proposed and built for local people, aims to boost such a spirit crucial to the region’s future prosperity.    Supported by local villagers, technologies and materials, the project has maximized long-term public benefits in humanity, economy, health and education for local people with minimum environmental intervention.

Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier - Exterior Photography, Beam
© Yingnan Chu

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Project location

Address:Zhuguanlongxiang, Shouning County, Ningde, Fujian, China

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Location to be used only as a reference. It could indicate city/country but not exact address.
About this office
Cite: "Tea Leaf Market of Zhuguanlong / THAD SUP Atelier" 21 Feb 2024. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/1013586/tea-leaf-market-of-zhuguanlong-thad-sup-atelier> ISSN 0719-8884

© Yingnan Chu

竹管垅茶青市场 / 清华大学建筑设计研究院 素朴建筑工作室

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