Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel

Qinhuangdao, China
Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel
Video © genarchitects
The Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel facing the Youyi Bay 's main square
Photo © SU Shengliang

The Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel, located in Qinhuangdao City, the nearest and most popular coastal resort near Beijing, stands at the southern entrance of a residential community, serving as the central hub for public activities. Over the last ten years, this community has consistently organized various cultural and artistic events, attracting numerous vacationers, digital nomads, and artists to stay and create here.

We aim to transform the hotel into the community's shared living room through diverse functions and an open floor plan layout. The hotel's entrance and lobby are positioned at the southeast corner of the first floor. The main spaces on the first and second floors are dedicated to public functions, with a two-story-high Forum Space opening to the courtyard on the south side. The remaining sides host retail and gallery spaces, accommodating gatherings, cultural lectures, concerts, and exhibitions. This serves as a natural transition between the hotel and the external plaza, enriching the building's ground floor with a vibrant public character, facilitating access from all sides, and allowing free movement through the space.

As a hotel catering to traveling creators, we aim to imbue the guest rooms with the ambiance of a cozy home study. Each room boasts a spacious desk by the window, complemented by bookshelves, a sofa, and a coffee table to create a simple reading space. Bed is positioned in another corner, near a small balcony for guests to relax and observe the square below. To optimize functions within a limited area and ensure a comfortable spatial ratio, we've adopted a square plan as the basis. This involves dividing the width direction into "two spans of size" and alternating their placement in the depth direction. The larger span layout incorporates a desk and bathroom, while the smaller span layout comprises a bed and balcony. By facing the desk towards the corner window, we minimize disturbances while working. The 6-meter width lends a spacious feel to the entire room, while staggering the layout pushes the bathroom's outline into the corridor, creating a welcoming entrance and adding rhythm to the hallway.

The hotel comprises 36 rooms arranged in a U-shape, with some facing an inner courtyard and others overlooking the plaza. Room layouts vary based on location and orientation, with sea-view rooms featuring balconies for distant vistas and inward-facing rooms offering floor-to-ceiling windows. Two special rooms on the top corners boast loft living spaces with windows in two directions, providing expansive views.

Facing the main plaza, the hotel's facade boasts a rustic texture. The unevenness of the cement bricks allows for subtle tonal variations, blending with mortar joints to resemble a single limestone block. The first and second-floor lobbies showcase exposed raw concrete frameworks, evoking a warm feeling akin to wooden architecture through mineral pigments and wooden formwork. This structural approach necessitates precise integration of civil, mechanical, finishing, and curtain wall elements. Exposed one-way ribbed beams connect the gallery to the lobby, allowing sunlight to filter through and illuminate the entire space.

Youyi Bay is a small community comprised of a group of buildings and several plazas
Photo © SU Shengliang
View of the main square from the guest room
Photo © SU Shengliang
The concave space at the northwest corner of the hotel's ground floor connects two squares
Photo © SU Shengliang
Youyi Bay as evening lights begin
Photo © SU Shengliang
Looking from the leisure square to the main square
Photo © SU Shengliang
The connection between the hotel's ground floor and the plaza creates a sense of community-facing publicness
Photo © SU Shengliang
The exposed ribbed beams seamlessly unite the gallery and the lobby into one cohesive space
Photo © SU Shengliang
The solid structure is formed by the integration of cement bricks and grey joints on the hotel's exterior walls
Photo © SU Shengliang
The hotel's southern courtyard
Photo © SU Shengliang
The homogeneous rafters and skylights unify the hotel's public spaces
Photo © SU Shengliang
The use of mineral pigments and wooden panels gives the concrete framework a warm wooden feel
Photo © SU Shengliang
The guest room type D features a 4.5-meter-high loft living space positioned at the corner
Photo © SU Shengliang
The hotel's two-story high forum space opens up to the courtyard on the south side
Photo © SU Shengliang
The guest room facing the courtyard side
Photo © SU Shengliang
View of the courtyard on the south side from the gallery entrance on hotel's second-floor
Photo © SU Shengliang
After one year of completion Everyday scenes of the hotel's ground floor forum hall and second-floor gallery
Photo © genarchitects
The gallery space on the second floor of the hotel
Photo © SU Shengliang
After one year of completion Everyday scenes of the hotel's ground floor forum hall and second-floor gallery
Photo © genarchitects
After one year of completion Everyday scenes of the hotel's ground floor forum hall and second-floor gallery
Photo © genarchitects
The lobby area of the spa on the second floor of the hotel
Photo © SU Shengliang
After one year of completion Everyday scenes of the hotel's ground floor forum hall and second-floor gallery
Photo © genarchitects
Details of the concrete beams and columns
Photo © SU Shengliang
Thrid floor plan of the Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel
Drawing © genarchitects
Site plan
Drawing © genarchitects
Buildings and external open spaces of Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel
Drawing © genarchitects
First floor plan of the Mi Casa Su Casa club Hotel
Drawing © genarchitects
Fourth floor plan of the Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel
Drawing © genarchitects
Second floor plan of the Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel
Drawing © genarchitects
Cross section of the Mi Casa Su Casa Club Hotel
Drawing © genarchitects
Diagram of hotel room type distribution
Drawing © genarchitects
Axonometric diagram of hotel room type
Drawing © genarchitects
Architecten
genarchitects
Locatie
Youyi Bay, Qinhuangdao, China
Jaar
2023
Klant
Aranya, VVYY Practice
Team
FAN Beilei, XUE Zhe, KONG Rui, WANG Yushan, XUE Jun, LIU Yujie, XIAO Xinyu, ZHU Mingxi, QIAN Jia, ZHANG Qiuyan, ZHANG Yiling, QIU Shenglu, ZANG Min, ZHANG Jiaxin, ZHU Lingyun, PANG Yinlei, CHEN Xiaofan, ZHANG Jiayu, WANG Shiyu, HUANG Wei, WANG Xin, ZHAO Nan, HU Jizhang, CHEN Xi, REN Qingyu, LI Jing
Structural Engineering
ZHANG Zhun, HU Xiaojie / AND Office
MEP Engineering
LIANG Ming, PAN Shen, WAN Huajun, LIU Jianping / SGIDI
Lighting Design
PANG Lei / Lumia Lighting Design, WANG Xian / DLX Lighting Design
Facade Design
BRM Facade
Fair-faced Concrete Consultant
Du Jie / Suzao Construction
Stone Consultant: JIANG Jun
Jinmifeng Stone
Local Design Institute
Dalian Institute of Architectural Design&Research Co.,Ltd
Interior Design of Hotel Public Areas (lobby, business, gallery, SPA)
genarchitects
Detailed Interior Construction Drawings of Hotel Public Areas (lobby, business, gallery, SPA)
Shanghai Jinxi Construction Engineering co., ltd
Interior Design of Hotel Room
HOUSEOfLOCI, VVYY Practice
Conceptual Landscape Design
genarchitects
Detailed Landscape Design
Aecom

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