It connects the “Unified Single Plash” with four volumes of Jinji Lake Pavilion, designed by the Great Danish Studio as a reference to its location planted with trees in Sochu, China.
It overlooks Jinji Lake, the 1200 square meter building contains four comfortable public spaces for metals, arranged around a central courtyard where the locals can gather.

Big designed in cooperation with the ARTS LOCAL Studio collection, the four structures contain a café, cafe, restaurant center and visitors with wide openings.
The wrapping over it is one wavy roof, the holed glass tiles that draw the light covered with the interior, and the day on the surrounding trees.

“The wing of Lake Jinji is photographed as a family of public rooms arranged under one uniform umbrella,” said studio founder Pierre Engels.
“It is under the major camphor trees along the lake, Jenji Jinji provides a quiet space for society,” added the studio partner.
She said, “It is imagined as an extension of the umbrella surrounding the leaves.”

It aims to resemble “pixels”, the glass roof tiles consist of two educated layers.
While the leaves are similar, they are also a gesture to the tiled surfaces of traditional Chinese standards, according to Big.

Engels said: “Reving the traditional Chinese Chinese structure, the ceiling of ceramic tiles is replaced by actual glass tiles, taking the concept of lightness and transparency to another level, and the discrimination between the interior, the external, the garden and the architecture.”
Huang added: “Double paintings throw double shades, imitate the papers pattern while providing optimal thermal performance, and mixing poetic beauty with functions,” Huang added.
Large sculptures with a double height throughout the building to serve as protected corridors linking its four programs around the central courtyard.
Throughout the interior, the wide glass facades enable looks on the lake and the interior to the yard. The steel is used to reflect the light while using the floors dominated internally and externally.

Jinji Lake Pavilion is one of 11 always developed as part of the city’s initiative to create a “vibrant and wicked picnic” for freshwater lake. Another of this wooden cabin from the Galaxy Arch, which contains a curved roof with a large blanket.
Big Big sits next to the Suzhou Museum of Constant Museum of the Studio, which was filmed with curved metal surfaces and is scheduled to complete this year.
Other projects that the studio recently revealed include Hospice in Denmark, designed as “the days of a village for the last life” and the Opera and Ballet theater in Kosovo wrapped with a sculptures.
Photography by studios.
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