Half-Mountain Cloud Station / Qing Studio + Li Nu
Briefly

Half-Mountain Cloud Station, located at the foot of Nankun Mountain in Huizhou, Guangdong, is part of the 'Two-Mountain Architectural Art Program'. It draws inspiration from Su Dongpo’s poetic verse. The project features three lightweight constructions that engage with the landscape without dominating it. Arranged thoughtfully within natural crevices, these constructions emphasize the relationship between the environment and human experience. The Mountain Post, Hometown Pavilion, and Cloud Pavilion serve as contemplative elements, inviting viewers to reflect on their surroundings while also connecting with the passage of time.
Located at the foot of Nankun Mountain in Huizhou, Guangdong, Half-Mountain Cloud Station serves as a key node in the 'Two-Mountain Architectural Art Program'. The project is inspired by Su Dongpo's 'Sixteen Joys of Life in Huizhou', specifically the verse 'viewing mountains after rain from a tower'. It responds poetically to tensions between city and nature, memory and future.
Three lightweight constructions pose three quiet questions to the landscape. These constructions find their own order within fault lines and crevices, turning topographical undulations into a rhythm of space.
The three constructions-Mountain Post, Hometown Pavilion, and Cloud Pavilion-are like gentle knocks on the door of time, initiating a dialogue spanning millennia and a journey cradled by nature.
Read at ArchDaily
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