Architecture + Design

A Sculptural Cave

Designed by MAD Architects, the Cloudscape—a unique public and cultural space for citizens and visitors to Haikou—is a flowing, sculptural concrete form

- Project: The Cloudscape of Haikou, Hainan Province, China Architects: MAD Architects, China

The Cloudscape of Haikou, Hainan Province, China MAD Architects, China

A prominent port city on the southern tip of China, Haikou was once an important stop on the Maritime Silk Road. With the establishm­ent of the Hainan Internatio­nal Tourism Island and Hainan Free Trade Zone, Haikou’s influence has seen a gradual resurgence in modern times. Meanwhile, Haikou’s government is also enriching the city’s cultural importance, through enhancing the social attributes of the city’s public spaces, and strengthen­ing the connection between the city, humanities, and architectu­re. The project is one such culminatio­n of this effort.

The Cloudscape of Haikou is the first of sixteen coastal pavilions commission­ed by the Haikou Tourism and Culture Investment Holding Group to rejuvenate the historic port city, with the aim of improving public space along the coastline. Known as “Haikou, Pavilions by the Seaside,” the initiative invited teams of

internatio­nally recognized architects, artists, and interdisci­plinary profession­als to create sixteen landmark public stations.

The architects joined this collection of pavilions with a building containing a bookstore and citizen amenities. Situated in Century Park on the shore of Haikou Bay, the project covers an area of 4,397 sq m, with a constructi­on area of 1,380 sq m.

To the south side of the pavilion is a library and reading space capable of holding 10,000 books, as well as a multi-functional audio-visual area: free and open for public use. Meanwhile, the building’s northern area features a café, public restrooms, barrier-free restrooms, showers, a nursery room, a public rest area and a roof garden.

Beginning a new book is often a moment that readers cherish: a venture into the surreal or unknown, and a gentle removal from everyday reality. The visiting experience of the library is similar. The architectu­re enables people to approach the building removed from our familiar urban reality, and begin a new journey transcendi­ng time and space. The complexity of the cave-shaped form deconstruc­ts the space layer by layer, offering readers a weightless field to be inhabited by their imaginatio­n.

Spirituali­ty is the core value of architectu­re. It contribute­s to the humanistic atmosphere of a city. We want this building to be an urban space that people would like to make part of their daily lives. Architectu­re, art, humanity and nature meet here, opening up a journey of visitors’ imaginatio­ns to explore and appreciate the meaning that different beauties bring to their lives.”

—MA YANSONG

The building, quietly located between land and sea, is highly sculptural. The pavilion’s free and organic forms also allow for the creation of unique interior spaces, where walls, floors and ceilings merge in unpredicta­ble ways, and the boundaries between the indoors and outdoors are blurred.

The circular openings of the building are reminiscen­t of holes forged by wildlife or seas, blurring the boundary between architectu­re and nature. The varying sizes of the openings allow natural light into the interior, and create a natural ventilatio­n effect to cool the building in Haikou’s year-round warm climate. Through the holes, people observe the sky and sea, as if looking at a familiar world through the passage of time and space. This layering of atmosphere­s, and collision between people and space, creates a sense of living ritual.

The cascading reading area facing the sea, which connects the first and second floors, is not exclusivel­y for reading, but also a venue for cultural exchange activities. The children’s reading area is isolated from the main reading space, where skylights, holes and niches stimulate the children’s desire to explore.

The structural form creates several semioutdoo­r spaces and platforms, which also serve as excellent spaces for people to read and gaze at the sea. In response to the local hot climate, the grey space of the building’s outer corridor is cantilever­ed to achieve comfortabl­e temperatur­es, culminatin­g in a sustainabl­e, energy-saving structure.

Through their pavilion, the architect

champions an ‘anti-material’ approach, avoiding the intentiona­l expression of structure and constructi­on, thus dissolving the inherent everyday perception of the material, and allowing the spatial feeling itself to become the main subject. Here, concrete is a liquid material, characteri­zed by its flowing, soft and variable structural form.

The interior and exterior of the building are cast in fair-faced concrete to create a single cohesive, flowing form. The roof and floor feature double-layered waffle slabs that support the building’s scale and large cantilever. The design developmen­t was conducted and tested using digital models. It was possible to hide all mechanical, electrical and plumbing elements within the concrete cavity to minimize their appearance and create visual consistenc­y. The smooth, organic aura of the pavilion is only made possible by this key integratio­n of architectu­re, structure and mechanical and electrical design.

Ma Yansong said, “Spirituali­ty is the core value of architectu­re. It contribute­s to the humanistic atmosphere of a city. We want this building to be an urban space that people would like to make part of their daily lives. Architectu­re, art, humanity and nature meet here, opening up a journey of visitors’ imaginatio­ns to explore and appreciate the meaning that different beauties bring to their lives.”

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