Silver A' Design Award Winner 2023
Zhu Haiyan's Hotel Lighting project operates as a rich symbolic meditation on temporal layering, industrial memory, and the threshold between labor and leisure, past and present. The preserved industrial chimney functions as a vertical axis mundi, a centering element that connects earthly productivity with atmospheric aspiration, its cylindrical form echoing archetypal tower symbolism associated with ambition, communication between realms, and enduring presence. The monumental glass curtain wall serves as a threshold membrane—simultaneously transparent and protective—inviting interpretation as a symbol of openness, honesty, and the contemporary value placed on revealing rather than concealing structural truth. Within this transparent envelope, the exposed steel trusses become icons of industrial heritage, their triangulated geometry suggesting stability, strength, and the geometric rationality of modernist engineering philosophy. The warm-cool chromatic dialogue carries profound symbolic weight: the cool blue illumination of structural elements evokes memory, preservation, and temporal distance, while the warm amber glow of inhabited spaces suggests present vitality, human warmth, and hospitality. This temperature contrast may be understood as visualizing the conceptual relationship between heritage and contemporary life—the cool past supporting and containing the warm present. The checkerboard pattern of the guest room facade introduces symbolism of order, alternation, and regulated domestic life, each illuminated window representing individual human presence within collective structure. The curved roofline might suggest organic growth, adaptability, and the softening of industrial rigor through contemporary design sensibility. The landscaped foreground with its young supported trees carries regeneration symbolism, suggesting new growth rooted in transformed industrial ground. The overall composition invites contemplation of how societies honor productive heritage while reimagining purpose, celebrating the aesthetic potential inherent in industrial forms, and creating spaces where memory and contemporary experience coexist harmoniously.
Shangri-La Hotel is located at the core of Shougang Park. The original site was a power generation plant that provided energy for steel production. It has a total construction area of 63,600 square meters and has 283 guest rooms. The lighting of the entire hotel's indoor and outdoor spaces uses LED light sources, and the lighting scene changes with time. The designer uses warm color temperature lighting to create a comfortable light environment for the hotel space.