Xinbei Yu, Experiencing with the heart, Feeling it with senses [×]

How may interior design work with concepts of sensual complexity to create a space of ritual calm and reflection?
Contemporary China is undergoing a period of modernization where older buildings are being demolished at a rapid rate. Demolished too is a sense of history and sensual complexity that I associate with these vanishing spaces. In new urban developments there is a lack of historic and ritual spaces that emphasise calm, and contemplation. The loss of these spaces has the potential to alienate the people that once inhabited them as well as depriving younger generations of this history and experience.
In Juhani Pallasmaa’s book “The Eyes of the skin”, he advocates an idea of architecture where experience and sensory subtlety are combined into tactile architecture.1 His architecture of the senses combines “rough” space and a sensual complexity of detail that gives intimacy and requires all the senses to experience it. Through my visits to ritual spaces in China—tea rooms and temples particularly—I have observed such a unique experience that arises from interiors that retain a sense of tradition and culture, and that seem designed to address sensory complexity— a mind-body combination that speaks to and resonates with the space.
This semester I have worked to develop a proposal for an abandoned building- an indoor swimming pool complex in the suburb of___ in my city. This space which is slated for demolition is an architecture of real potential for the kinds of sensory subtlety that Palaasma champions and that I value in traditional Chinese architecture. Instead of demolition I have imagined a repurposing of this space. By adapting the swimming complex I have sought to protect this building, proposing an entirely different purpose whilst also preserving its historic qualities. The reconceived interior works with spaces, natural light, surfaces and textures to create a spatial experience of ritual, calm and reflection that speaks to all the senses. The intention is to reconstruct and repair both building and inner experience of those who will use it.