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Creation of exhibition hall interiors with sharp angles and surfaces

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Creation of exhibition hall interiors with sharp angles and surfaces,

Topway Space Design has designed an exhibition hall with sharp corners and surfaces, adding diamond-cut operations.

Named Spanish GOJE Slate exhibition hall, the interiors offer comfortable and moody spaces made of different corner surfaces and furniture.

The 1000 square meter building is located in Guangdong, China.

 

Creation of exhibition hall interiors with sharp angles and surfaces

 

 The beauty of indefinite geometry

The oblique shape of an object has a multiplicity from a physics perspective;

it represents extreme instability and stability.

For example, the Leaning Twin Towers of Bologna in Italy and the Leaning Tower of Pisa represent instability, while the pyramids of Egypt represent stability.

The unique spirit of space is also shaped by the construction and division of space in an undefined italics.

Diamond-shaped space

The Spanish show in the lobby was reconstructed with an oblique cut.

It moves away from the traditional horizontal and vertical construction of buildings,

creating a diamond-shaped space.

Diamond cutting is a diamond processing method, representing an extreme processing technique.

Each surface presents a different lighting case and shows the unique beauty of geometry due to diamond cutting.

By cutting the space through different scales of oblique shapes, different sizes are divided and regrouped.

The language of geometry builds an overlapping space full of contradictions.

This is no longer a traditional material exhibition hall, but more like a three-dimensional art gallery,

an unreal space grouped together by fragments of memory.

 

Creation of exhibition hall interiors with sharp angles and surfaces

 

Shine the lights for the future

The original building had windows on the west-facing side only, while the other three sides were closed.

The designer improved and transformed the structure of the building,

in particular by opening a hollow three-story lobby at the corner of the east side of the exhibition hall and cutting a window on the east side of the third floor to bring in sunlight.

The inverted triangle design was used for the hollow ceiling,

while the sloping surface facing the window outside used a reflective material.

The light was refracted twice through the reflection effect.

Sunlight flows through beams and columns, making the entire space instantly sacred.

 

Creation of exhibition hall interiors with sharp angles and surfaces

 

This is an exploration of a process, a mysterious, narrow, dark,

and semi-oppressive journey, all to finally reach God.

The introduction of natural light makes the space more natural, softer and more touchable.

Different functional areas have been linked to reasonable trading.

It creates an open relationship in space that restores communication between people to the most primitive, effective and interesting way.

 

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