Building Narrative has sensitively engaged with tea culture at BASAO Teahouse Panji, designing an urban retreat that not only offers residential comfort but connects with its surroundings.
July 26th, 2024
Burrowed in Xiamen, BASAO Panji marks the third collaboration between BASAO and designers, Building Narrative. The teahouse recharts the dualities between traditional and contemporary tea culture. Like a living room in the heart of the city, BASAO Panji provides residential comfort while staging local tea traditions for patrons today. The design brief borrows the traditional Fujian courtyard architecture that are considered on three differing scales: the urban, interior and furniture scales.
Regarding the urbane scale of BASAO Teahouse Panji, the primary design objective was to design “a living room for the city.” Building Narrative had to navigate the parameters of the site location – the teahouse is located at the corner of a shopping mall, orientated towards a key intersection in central Xiamen. The inaugural challenge was to stand out against the shopping centre facade and not get lost within its expansive scale and opulence while connecting the interior space with the street.
Building Narrative replaced the mirrored facade with clear glass and developed a “palette of natural materials, warm lighting and subtle furnishings to evoke a sense of hospitality and domesticity.” The outdoor seating creates a space for visitors to “linger outside and reinforces the connection from the teahouse to a sunken terrace below and the city beyond.”
The floorplan is configured to emulate the layout of a traditional Fujian courtyard house. The internal courtyard is the loftiest space within the tea house, adorned with a tiled floor and lightbox ceiling that gives the perception of an open sky and is orientated to cast differing intensities of natural light infiltration from morning to night. A stone fountain anchors the courtyard experience with the sound of running water and further adds to the experience by making reference to the traditional.
Related: TIDU RESERVE by RooMoo Design Studio
The furniture within the teahouse is at times oversized and repetitious, designed to create a scene visible from the streetscape. The interiors resemble a home environment, with bookshelves adorned with trinkets and a large communal dining table surrounded by domestic furniture. Similar to an open-plan living layout, the courtyard and lounge are removed of all walls that divide the space, and alternatively the over-sized furniture-like-objects separate the spaces, “framing the different activities as a series of ‘scenes’ to experience tea making and drinking.”
Building Narrative
buildingnarrative.com
Photography
Wen Studio
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
BLANCO launches their latest finish for a sleek kitchen feel.
Elevate any space with statement lighting to illuminate and inspire.
The social housing project at Preston Crossing by Hayball provides much-needed homes and arguably establishes a new standard in community-focused, sustainable design.
OMA Managing Partner – Architect David Gianotten made a fleeting visit for Sydney Design Week, catching up with our editor before his talk, ‘Beyond Architecture’.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
The inclusion of the environmental bamboo upholstery option in the iconic Eames Lounge Chair and Ottoman designs by Herman Miller not only spotlights the brand’s forward-thinking approach to sustainability but also pays homage to the pioneering spirit embedded in the Eames design legacy.
Gadigal and Barangaroo stations are now open, connecting Sydney with new gateways that meld design with the cultural landscape of the city.