Arch-studio -
Arch-Studio famously avoids luxury finishes. Instead, they elevate industrial and reclaimed materials—brick, concrete, galvanized steel, plywood, and polycarbonate panels. This is not a budget constraint but a philosophical choice. They follow a logic of "honest tectonics": a wall is not a skin for insulation but the actual structure; a polycarbonate panel admits light while hiding structure, creating a soft, diffuse glow. In the Twisting Courtyard , the architects used blue bricks (traditional) but laid them in a twisted, corbelled pattern that turns a flat wall into a textured, seating landscape. This action demonstrates that material richness comes from how a material is assembled, not from its rarity. This approach is deeply useful for contemporary practice: it proves that compelling space can be generated from a single material and simple construction techniques.
Unlike Western modernists who used glass to erase the boundary between inside and outside, Arch-Studio uses openings with discipline. They understand that in dense hutong environments, privacy and light are scarce resources. Their projects often feature narrow light wells, high clerestory windows, and cut-out courtyards. The House of the Future uses a folding steel door that completely opens the interior to the sky, but only for a limited width. The result is choreographed light —shafts of light that move across raw concrete walls, marking time. For Arch-Studio, the void (the empty space of the courtyard) is not leftover space; it is the actual room. They invert the typical priority: the built form exists to define the void, not to fill it. arch-studio
A useful critique of Arch-Studio is that their aesthetic, while powerful, risks becoming a new orthodoxy. The combination of raw concrete, polycarbonate, and twisted brick is now imitated across China. Furthermore, their work is most successful in single-family houses or small galleries; scaling their "poor materials" philosophy to a high-rise residential tower remains unproven. Additionally, some argue that their spaces, while beautiful in photographs, can feel cold or acoustically harsh (due to hard surfaces) for elderly residents. Arch-Studio famously avoids luxury finishes
Introduction In an era of architectural spectacle dominated by digital form-making and expensive cladding, the Beijing-based practice Arch-Studio (founded by Han Wenqiang) occupies a critical counter-position. Known for projects such as the Twisting Courtyard and Baitasi House of the Future , Arch-Studio has developed a design language that is tactile, frugal, and intensely site-specific. This essay argues that Arch-Studio’s core contribution to contemporary architecture lies in its rigorous transformation of traditional courtyard housing ( hutong ) using three key strategies: the strategic manipulation of negative space (void), the honest expression of humble materials, and the negotiation of light as a construction material. They follow a logic of "honest tectonics": a
The global value of Arch-Studio lies in its replicable model for historic infill. Many cities face the problem of decaying historic cores. Arch-Studio’s work serves as a manual for "urban acupuncture": small, precise interventions that trigger larger rejuvenation. By adding bathrooms, kitchens, and modern insulation within a traditional brick envelope, they make the hutong livable for the 21st century. They do not evict residents for luxury redevelopment. Instead, they prove that a 20-square-meter room can feel expansive if the courtyard is treated as a living room. This has profound social implications: architecture becomes a tool for social equity, not displacement.
The siheyuan (courtyard house) is the DNA of old Beijing. However, its single-story, introverted layout is often seen as inefficient for modern density. Arch-Studio refuses to demolish these structures, nor does it merely preserve them as museums. Instead, it performs a surgical modernization. In the Baitasi House of the Future , the practice inserted a polished, reflective steel box into a crumbling traditional courtyard. Rather than copying wooden beams, the steel box reflects the existing brick walls and sky, creating a "building that disappears." This is not destruction but dialogue : the new architecture gains its meaning by reflecting the old, proving that modernity in a historic district is possible through deference, not imitation.