The design practice YI+MU, established in Beijing and Vancouver and led by Yi Chen and Muchen Zhang, was commissioned to design Shenzhen Qizhushe Workshop, a new space dedicated to wood furniture, located in the Shenzhen Art Design Center, in Songfu South Road, Baoan District, which was renovated from an industrial factory in the 1980s.

The new workshop aims to incite the passion and creativity of designers and furniture craftsmen and also to serve as an exhibition venue for original furniture and home accessories.
The design proposed by YI+MU is developed around a pillar located in the center of the space and takes as a visual concept the idea of ​​"Nest", which is enhanced with strong lighting in the center, creating an effect of "light space " that seeps through the wooden structure.

The space is completed with a 19-meter-long piece of suspended mesh display shelves, allowing for future modifications as the room's display is arranged.

The materials used are wood, from the remains discarded during the production of furniture, and dark gray steel.

The lobby of the space features a wall to display furniture production tools along with samples of modern furniture materials.


Shenzhen Qizhushe Workshop and Exhibition Space by YI+MU. Photograph by YI+MU Design Office


Shenzhen Qizhushe Workshop and Exhibition Space by YI+MU. Photograph by YI+MU Design Office
 

Project description by YI+MU


There are scenes that can only be observed with eyes closed, such as dreams.
Qian Zhongshu


Beneath the visible physical world, truth shines vividly in the vast and boundless spiritual realm. People spend their whole lives searching for hope in dreams and for soul-yearned desire, trying to enter a place that can only be reached by the heart: the spiritual domain — a world with a sense of belonging; a warm and protected spiritual retreat.

Spiritual Retreat:
A Spatial Building Block

Shenzhen Qizhushe Workshop is located in the Shenzhen Art Design Center, which was renovated from an industrial factory in the 1980s. The workshop aims to incite the passion and creativity of designers and furniture craftsmen. It also serves as an exhibition venue for original furniture and related home accessories to the outside world.

Using metaphor as a technique, YI+MU expresses an intangible, abstract concept with a concrete, physical space. The whole space can be seen as a convergence of homes and a metaphoric representation of retreat, a place where lonely, wandering souls can find repose. The designers aim to build a warm and cozy “Nest” for the passers-by of this world, in which they can explore and shape their inner spiritual abodes.

The overall structure is developed around the only column in the center. As the midpoint of the space, the column plays a role in stabilizing it, symbolizing the only unshakable and lasting promise and commitment in life or the ideal utopia we all are searching for.

Breath of Light:
The Creation of a Spiritual Experience

With the central column as the starting point, the layout extends into a virtual, cross-like structure, a symbol of belief and the expression of its related faith. It is also the inner framework and strength that supports life and the entire space.

The spatial experience is built around the core visual concept of the Nest, and the fortified sense of sequential design lends the whole space a feeling of outward expansion, yet with free-flowing and vivid air. Strong lighting is used in the heart of the Nest, creating a “house of light” effect, symbolizing the inner shine of spirituality.

Light is filtered through the Nest’s structures, generating a slow flicker resembling the breaths of a living body as well as the morphological changes of life forces. In order to highlight the spirituality of the Nest, the lighting for the surrounding exhibition space has been deliberately lowered, allowing it to diffuse from the central area throughout the entire space. With the subtle swaying of light and shadow, the virtual and the real interlace, filling the space with a certain vitality and spirituality.

Comprehensive Intervention:
A Strengthened Sense of Belonging

A 19-meter-long block of suspended mesh display racks runs through the entire space like a double-edged sword, forming a sharp yet harmonious contrast with the Nest and releasing both a multi-dimensional experience and highly tense spatial order.

Abundant indoor space is reserved for furniture designers to freely complete both creative work and reception tasks. In addition to giving more display space to original furniture, this also allows for the unshackled customization of exhibits.

Throughout the entire space, the Nest is made from scraps discarded during furniture production, with these scraps retaining their original wooden color, while the rest of the styling is in dark-gray steel. The natural warmth of wood and the industrial coldness of metal form sharp conflict and contrast. The designer skillfully juxtaposes harshness and comfort, creating a dynamically complex psychological feeling and emotional effect and strengthening the unique sense of belonging within the Nest.

The foyer of the space features a display wall of legacy furniture production tools alongside samples of modern furniture materials. They are specially curated to make the space more engaging in terms of cultural communication.

Regarding metaphor as a basis, YI+MU breaks the boundary between the tangible and the spiritual through the perception and expression of abstract concepts, thereby expanding people’s cognition of and experience within the given space. In the form of the space’s styling and visual language, it allows people to brush against the meaning of life beyond what can be touched. It is a spiritual Nest to explore, soothe, and fill the gaps in their hearts as well as the endless desires buried deep within their spiritual essence.

More information

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Designers
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YI+MU Design Office. Lead Designers.- Yi Chen and Muchen Zhang.
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Design team
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Wujie Li, Zhiqiang Yang, Yi Xiao, Yanrong Yang, Xu Zhang.
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Location
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Shenzhen, China.
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Area
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320 m².
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Dates
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Completion date.- April 2021.
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Materials
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Solid Wood, Self-levelling of Cement, Metal Mesh, Metal Plate.
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Photography
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YI+MU Design Office. Co-founded by Yi Chen and Muchen Zhang in 2002, the firm is a space de­sign prac­tice based in Bei­jing, China with a branch in Van­cou­ver, Canada. Both of them have been grad­u­ated from the Cen­tral Acad­emy of Fine Arts, and their artis­tic cre­ation has con­tin­ued since 1994. They started to en­gage in space de­sign in 2000 and co-cre­ated Bei­jing Fenghe­muchen in 2002. In 2005, they moved to Canada to start cre­ation in Van­cou­ver and Bei­jing. With di­ver­si­fied space de­sign works, they have held many in­di­vid­ual art ex­hi­bi­tions and space in­stal­la­tion ex­hi­bi­tions. Over the years, they have gained a rep­u­ta­tion in the de­sign in­dus­try and won a lot of de­sign awards both at home and abroad.

Their de­sign usu­ally pre­sents a wide and open multi-per­spec­tive, in­te­grat­ing East and West cul­ture freely and ap­pro­pri­ately, and in­ter­pret­ing ori­en­tal cul­ture and its spir­i­tual mean­ing in a fresher, more ob­jec­tive, and more rec­og­niz­able way.
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Published on: March 30, 2022
Cite: "The fragmenting of density. Shenzhen Qizhushe Workshop and Exhibition Space by YI+MU " METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/fragmenting-density-shenzhen-qizhushe-workshop-and-exhibition-space-yimu> ISSN 1139-6415
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