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YueCheng Courtyard Kindergarten / MAD Architects

YueCheng Courtyard Kindergarten / MAD Architects - More Images+ 32

Beijing, China

Jiading Mini Block, An Urban Experiment / Atelier FCJZ

Jiading Mini Block, An Urban Experiment / Atelier FCJZ - More Images+ 37

  • Architects: Atelier FCJZ
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  70086
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2020

Changli Garden / TM Studio

Changli Garden / TM Studio - More Images+ 27

  • Architects: TM Studio
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  2100
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2020

21cake Baoshan Store / Atelier FCJZ

21cake Baoshan Store / Atelier FCJZ - More Images+ 11

  • Architects: Atelier FCJZ
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  167
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2020

Why Don’t We Teach Chinese Architecture in the United States?

This article was originally published on Common Edge as "Why Don’t We Teach Chinese Architecture?"

How many U.S. architecture professors know that there is a Chinese treatise equivalent to Vitruvius’ Ten Books of Architecture? Very few, I suspect. I taught architectural history for more than 20 years before I discovered the marvelous Yingsao Fashi, a Song Dynasty book by a prominent court official who, as far as we know, was not an architect or builder. In fact, prior to the Ming Dynasty no prominent temple, palace, or shrine in China was designed by an architect because the concept of a single mastermind in charge of a building project was foreign to the East Asian way of designing environments of any kind.

Blurring the Line Between Architecture and Furniture

An emerging design trend is filling the gap between furniture and architecture by shaping space through objects at the intersection of the two, creating a dynamic and highly adaptable environment. Either a consequence of the increased demand for flexibility in small spaces or the architectural expression of a device-oriented society, elements in between architecture and furniture open the door towards an increased versatility of space. Neither architecture nor furniture (or perhaps both), these objects operate at the convergence of the two scales of human interaction, carving a new design approach for interior living spaces.

Blurring the Line Between Architecture and Furniture - More Images+ 5

Suzhou Urban Planning Exhibition Hall / AUBE CONCEPTION

Suzhou Urban Planning Exhibition Hall / AUBE CONCEPTION - More Images+ 10

  • Architects: AUBE CONCEPTION
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  29789
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2018

“Architecture Making Depends on Good Communication”: Interview with Tong Ming

Tong Ming (b. 1968, Nanjing, China) received his bachelor’s (1990) and master’s (1993) degrees in architecture from Southeast University in Nanjing. In 1995, Tong moved to Shanghai to pursue his PhD in Urban Planning at Tongji University, which he obtained in 1999. He then worked at Suzhou Design Institute until establishing his own independent University-based practice, TM Studio in 2004. He also maintains another studio UNO, Urban Network Office space in West Bund specializing in organizing seminars, workshops, exhibitions, and lectures.

“Architecture Making Depends on Good Communication”: Interview with Tong Ming - More Images+ 13

Tea House in Li Garden / Atelier Deshaus

Tea House in Li Garden / Atelier Deshaus - More Images+ 18

Eagle Studio / waa

Hangzhou, China

Best Modern Examples of Ancient Courtyard Renovations in China

Chinese courtyard houses are one of the most common housing typologies spanning all the way from the northern capital of Beijing to the poetic southern cities Hangzhou and back to the picturesque regions of Yunnan. Typically referred as heyuan, these courtyards homes are simply a “yard enclosed on four sides."

Best Modern Examples of Ancient Courtyard Renovations in China - More Images+ 13

Security Entrance to the 2019 SUSAS / TJAD Original Design Studio

Security Entrance to the 2019 SUSAS / TJAD Original Design Studio - More Images+ 19

Xingfu Park Office Renovation / Atelier xy

Xingfu Park Office Renovation / Atelier xy - More Images+ 21

  • Interior Designers: Atelier xy
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  200
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2019

Winners of the ArchDaily China Building of the Year 2020 Awards

Another year, another successful ArchDaily China Building of the Year Awards! With more than 20,000 votes gathered over the past 20 days, the results of the 2020 edition are in! Once more, the award has proved to be the largest architecture prize centered around people’s opinion. Crowdsourced, the most relevant projects of the year were nominated and selected by our readers.

This year we celebrate three projects -- highlighting a wide range of interventions, typologies, scale, material and locations, the winners are a mere reflection of the vast outreach of the profession. With new names surfacing every year, this edition, as the previous ones did, honors well-established practices and the newcomers. High-profile figures include Atelier FCJZ with its bridge museum in the Chinese countryside, Neri&Hu Design and Research Office and its sculpture art center, and Atelier Lai's Bamboo Bridge.

True to its status, ArchDaily China, the most far-reaching Chinese architectural website, is and will always be a platform for all architecture enthusiasts. Curating the best in the world, thanks to the trust of architectural firms and the devotion of our readers, ArchDaily’s realm keeps expanding exponentially. For that, we are grateful! 

ArchDaily China Building of the Year 2020 Awards: The Finalists

Following an exciting week of nominations, ArchDaily’s readers have evaluated over 800 projects and selected 10 finalists of the Building of the Year Award. Over 20,000 architects and enthusiasts participated in the nomination process, choosing projects that exemplify what it means to push architecture forward. These finalists are the buildings that have inspired ArchDaily readers the most.