The wetland park on the east side of the hotel serves as a precious urban landform memory after the southward expansion of Shenzhen's coastline. Together with the adjacent Window of the World Park, it forms invaluable natural landscape resources for the hotel. The future Shenzhen Bay Super Headquarters to the south will also become a striking scenic feature. The avenue lined with Terminalia neotaliala filters out urban noise, guiding guests toward inner tranquility. The design aims to introduce natural into the hotel, creating a quiet place in the hustle and bustle.
The original building facade appeared cluttered. The design used a minimalist geometric red grid frame to form a complete appearance, achieving a lightweight renovation. The eye-catching red color makes the hotel stand out as a focal point amid the greenery. Meanwhile, existing window openings on the facade were enlarged and coated with gray-white paint to form a neutral and bright backdrop that harmonizes with the red framework. The entrance features a dramatically cantilevered stainless steel canopy that creates visual tension, complemented by glass brick walls and grid-patterned aluminum profiles to achieve rich material variations and visual balance. Low shrubbery adds vibrant vitality to the entryway.
The perforated rust plate, Chinese tallow tree and shrubs together enclose a leisure roof garden. Guests can overlook the Shenzhen Bay Super Headquarters skyline to the south and the wetland park to the east. They can also enjoy the fireworks show of the Window of the World on weekend nights, enjoying the prosperity of the city and the natural scenery.
Limited by property rights, the ground-floor lobby was originally cramped and directly faces to western sun exposure and chaotic street views. The design adopts the method of suppressing first and then promoting: solid walls shield the entrance from disturbances, leaving only a transparent glass entry, while a narrow south-facing courtyard channels light and creates scenery. After the guests enter, their sight is directed to the pure side courtyard, with spaces unfolding progressively. The extra-long reception desk becomes the core visual element while enhancing spatial depth. The wooden grilles, glass bricks and light and shadow are intertwined, combined with minimalist furniture and dried branches to cultivate a tranquil, elegant ambiance.
The restaurant uses a space strategy that is first depressed and then elevated. Guests walk from the dim elevator hall into the restaurant lobby, and the bottom of the suspended terrazzo wall is used to guide the light. Guests then enter the bright dining area, and the forest landscape outside the window is suddenly revealed. The disadvantage of the low floor height is cleverly resolved by strengthening the sense of continuity between beams and walls, paving division and ceiling limitation, and the large space is divided into different dining areas. The indoor color continues the facade. The red cement-patterned ceiling by the window sets off the nature outside the window, supplemented by dark wooden grilles to create a calm and quiet dining ambiance. Solid walls along windows divide space and conceal structural columns to create view frames, with hollow grilles reducing visual weight.



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