Flickering Peak CP·SUN RIVER Art Gallery by Wutopia Lab

In 2024, the Flickering Peak, designed by Wutopia Lab, was completed in Coffee Village, Wanning, Hainan. The Sun River Art Center, covered with a semi-transparent white Ferrari membrane composed of three perforation rates, was built on the site of a coffee plantation developed by returned overseas Chinese from Indonesia. With its dramatic visual expressions during day and night, it has become a cultural landmark symbolizing miracles and hope in the local area.

The story begins with the old routine of saving the day
The client was dissatisfied with the previous design of the art center. After the previous architect ran out of ideas, they approached me, hoping I could create a design that balances substance and visual appeal. The constraints were that the basement had already been constructed, so I could not alter the beam and slab structure types. The new building could not exceed the original structural load or go beyond the original building control lines.

Inspiration
The coffee town was originally a coffee plantation developed by overseas Chinese who returned during the anti-Chinese movement in Indonesia. They cleared the wilderness and established a coffee factory, creating a legendary story of the Chinese coffee industry. This history of persecution, exile, return, reclamation, and the creation of a miracle deeply moved me. I saw it as an encouragement during a struggling phase in my life, an inspiration about miracles.

Awakening a Meme
When I saw the layout of the three buildings in the original plan, the urge to create a sea awakened a meme in my mind: a pool and three mountains. I had used this concept in the Aluminum Mountain project, where I created the building as the third mountain after Luofu Mountain and Taiping Mountain. In the Sun River Coffee Town, I decided to turn the original three buildings directly into three mountains and create an artificial sea in front of the main mountain.

Photo © LIU Guowei

Plot: Mountain Construction
Among the three buildings in the original plan, the east and west auxiliary buildings serve as reception and office areas, while the central main building is the core of the art center. The east and west auxiliary buildings are the secondary mountains, and the main building is the primary mountain. The sea is created in front of the main mountain. Walking along the boardwalk on the sea, one enters the main mountain’s lobby. The sea also flows into the lobby like a tide.

Inside the lobby, there are two routes to climb the mountain. One route heads east, first entering the coffee reception area, passing through the open negotiating area, reaching the second-floor overseas Chinese exhibition area, and then arriving at the outdoor seating area. Another route climbs the large steps to the mezzanine, then to the second floor, or takes the elevator directly to the third floor.

Photo © LIU Guowei

After passing through the multi-functional hall, this route merges with the first one at the platform, and both continue up the outdoor stairs to the roof, where a hidden small coffee garden offers a panoramic view of the entire town. The climbing route interweaves indoor and outdoor spaces, turning the original box-shaped main building into an abstract layered mountain. The lobby is made spacious by removing one column through reinforcing the main beams in specific areas.

Addition as Subtraction
The terraced main building, combined with the auxiliary buildings based on their functions, is visually inconsistent and can easily be overshadowed by the cluster of buildings developed in the background. I decided to make an addition by covering each of the three buildings with a semi-transparent shell. These three shells can break free from the functional facades of the three buildings and independently shape abstracted mountain peaks. This ultimately achieves the effect of highlighting through subtraction in a complex background.

Photo © LIU Guowei

The shell, detached from the building’s climatic boundary, forms a new visual boundary. The space between the two boundaries becomes a genuinely shaded grey space. I have always been highly interested in experimenting with separating the visual boundary from the climatic boundary. This is actually based on practical experiences in traditional Chinese architecture. The article on how traditional Chinese architecture uses temporary structures to expand or reduce grey spaces to enhance living comfort under different weather conditions will be published in the book ‘Pulchra’.

Translucent Mountains
Due to structural load restrictions, I used lightweight membranes instead of the commonly used perforated aluminum panels. The Ferrari membranes with three different perforation rates gradually increase in transparency from bottom to top, forming a translucent visual boundary resembling mountain peaks. Under the scorching sunlight of Hainan, this creates a flickering effect on the roof, which is the origin of the name “flickering.”

Photo © LIU Guowei

Intertextuality
The cave and arched lobby, the mountain path and outdoor stairs, the sun and glass round windows, the entrance and skylight, the membrane structure and tree shade, the water channel and landscaping, the sea and pool, the beach and ground, the cliff and platform—all these natural elements, after being abstracted, combine with architectural components to form a set of intertextual texts, creating a super intertextual relationship between the art center and the mountain.

Gemini
During the day, the white Flickering Peak reflects in the white pool, naturally acquiring a sense of sanctity. The translucent Flickering Peak transforms into a mountain of lights in different colors, symbolizing different yet rich desires. However, inside the main mountain’s lobby, there will be a highly saturated lighting design. Under a blue background, the red sun shines, and at this moment, it is the resurrection of Rothko. Source by Wutopia Lab.

Photo © LIU Guowei

Location: Hainan, China

Architect: Wutopia Lab

Chief Architect: YU Ting

Project Manager: MU Zhilin

Project Architect: ZHAN Beidi, GUO Yuchen, YANG Siqi

Architecture Construction Drawing Consultant: Hainan design and research Institute Co., Ltd

Interior Construction Drawing Consultant: DAI Yunfeng, WU Xiaoyan, GUO Jianv, ZHANG Minmin, MA Chuanchuan

Mambrane Structure Concept Design Consultant: Bespoke. Creative Engineering Studio

Mambrane Structure Development and Construction: Beijing Z&T Fabric Architecture Technology Co. Ltd

Landscape Designer: Chongqing Weitu Landscape Design Co., Ltd

Lighting Design: Chloe ZHANG

Construction Team: China Railway Construction Group Co., Ltd

Client: Chia Tai (Hainan)Xinglong Coffee Industry Development Co.,Ltd

Building Area: 2606 m2

Year: July 2024

Photographs: LIU Guowei, Courtesy of Wutopia Lab

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Photo © LIU Guowei

Master Plan

Ground Floor Plan

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