Hutong Bubble 32 Beijing: MAD architects

Hutong Bubble 32, Beijing Building Project Photos, MAD Design, Property Images

Hutong Bubble Beijing, China

Chinese Residential Development: Metallic Bubble in Chinese Courtyard design by MAD architects

27 Jan 2010

Hutong Bubble 32

Location: Beijing, China
Date built: 2008
Design: MAD architects

Beijing Hutong Bubble by MAD

Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble
photos : Shu He

MAD’s proposal for the future Beijing 2050 was first revealed at its exhibition MAD IN CHINA in Venice during the 2006 Venice Architecture Biennale.

Beijing 2050 imagined three scenarios for the future of Beijing: a green public park in Tiananmen Square, a series of floating islands above the city’s CBD, and the “Future of Hutongs,” which featured metallic bubbles scattered over Beijing’s oldest neighborhoods. Three years later, the first hutong bubble has appeared in a small courtyard in Beijing.

China’s rapid development has altered the city’s landscape on a massive scale, continually eroding the delicate urban tissue of old Beijing. Such dramatic changes have forced an aging architecture to rely on chaotic, spontaneous renovations to survive the ever-changing neighborhood.

In addition, poor standards of hygiene have turned unique living space and potential thriving communities into a serious urban problem. Hutongs are gradually becoming the local inhabitants’ dumpster, the haven for the wealthy, the theme park for tourists.

Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble
photos : Shu He

The self-perpetuating degradation of the city’s urban tissue requires a change in the living conditions of local residents. Progress does not necessarily call for large scale construction – it can occur as interventions at a small scale. The hutong bubbles, inserted into the urban fabric, function like magnets, attracting new people, activities, and resources to reactivate entire neighborhoods.

They exist in symbiosis with the old housing. Fueled by the energy they helped to renew, the bubbles multiply and morph to provide for the community’s various needs, thereby allowing local residents to continue living in these old neighborhoods. In time, these interventions will become part of Beijing’s long history, newly formed membranes within the city’s urban tissue.

Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble
photos : Shu He

Unexpectedly, a manifestation of this idealistic vision has sprung up in one of Beijing’s hutongs, just three years after the exhibition. Hutong Bubble 32 provides a toilet and a staircase that extends onto a roof terrace for a newly renovated courtyard house.

Its shiny exterior renders it an alien creature, and yet at the same time, reflects the surrounding wood, brick, and greenery. The past and the future can thus coexist in a finite, yet dream-like world.

Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble Hutong Bubble
photos : Shu He

The real dream, however, is for the hutong bubble to link this culturally rich city to each individual’s vision of a better Beijing. The bubble is not regarded as a singular object, but as a means to initiate a renewed and energetic community.

Under the hatchet of fast-paced development, we must always be cognizant of Beijing’s long-term goals and the direction of its creativity. Perhaps we should shift our gaze away from the attraction of new monuments and focus on the everyday lives of the city’s residents.

Hutong Bubble proposals within Beijing ; interior
Hutong Bubble Beijing Hutong Bubble Beijing Hutong Bubble Beijing Hutong Bubble interior
images : MAD

Beijing Hutong Bubble – Building Information

Location: Beijing, China
Type: Courtyard Renovation
Construction Cost: 400,000RMB
Construction Engineers: Beijing Nade Environmental Art Design Co., Ltd.
Programme: toilet + staircase

Hutong Bubble
Beijing Hutong Bubble photo : Daniele Dainelli

Beijing Hutong Bubble
Beijing Hutong Bubble photo : Fang Zhenning

Architect: MAD
Director in Charge: Ma Yansong, Dang Qun
Design Team: Dai Pu, Yu Kui, Stefanie Helga Paul, He Wei, Shen Jianghai

Hutong : traditional housing typology based around a courtyard

Nominated for Brit Insurance Design Awards

Beijing Hutong Bubble images / information from MAD

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