Seashore Library, Beidaihe New District, China
Vector Architects, BeijingâGong Dong
Itâs happened to us all: You arrive at your vacation destination, ready to relax in the sun, and find youâve left your book at home. In most scenarios, youâre stuck with gift shop fare, but if youâre spending your days off in Beidaihe New District, China, youâre in luck: The beach comes equipped with its own library.
Located roughly three hours from Beijing, this growing resort town on Bohai Bay was master planned by Sasaki Associates in 2010, and the developers want to make sure it comes complete with cultural amenities. For the library, they hired Vector Architects, a Beijing-based studio headed by Gong Dong, to design a sculptural community space with an unconventional approach: The library has no paved path to the entrance. It can be accessed from the beach or from a running trail that passes nearby. But even from the trail, Dong says, âPeople will have to take a 30-meter walk through the sand.â Hardly a barrier-free entry, but the architects say that staff and facilities are available to help visitors with disabilities access the building. The library was placed away from the townâs other structures âin order to achieve a more direct relationship with the ocean,â Dong says.
The concrete structure was cast on site in board-lined formwork. âThe use of wood forms was inspired by the marks in the sand of footprints, wind, and wheels,â Dong says. Inside, the double-height reading room is a vaulted space that reaches its apex at the eastern edge, maximizing views of the water through a window wall with operable glass doors. Light also enters the space through a clerestory of hand-made glass blocks, clouded and textured by air bubbles introduced during the manufacturing process. Circular lightwells, each 30 centimeters in diameter, puncture the vault. These are operable vents, allowing for natural ventilation in nice weather, and admitting bright spots of western sunlight to the reading room.
Just to the north of the reading roomâs second-floor balcony, a meditation space with sloped ceilings and a single horizontal window out to the sea provides a compressive counterpoint to the light-filled reading roomâs release. Beyond it, and separated by a terrace, is an activity room with articulated ceilings and a west-facing clerestory that can be used for public events.
The curves of the ceiling planes throughout the 4,844-square-foot building were inspired by the waves crashing onto the beach. âThe design is focused on exploring the relationship of the space, the movement of the human body, the shifting light ambiance, the air ventilating through, and the ocean view,â Dong says.
And it all comes together in a sculptural and literary folly worth exploring. Visitors to Beidaihe New District should leave their books at home.