atelier guo works with conservation limits in china

 

In Nanping Village near Huangshan, China, Atelier Guo transforms a centuries-old ancestral hall into a functioning cinema and public living room, without altering its protected structure. The project demonstrates how preservation can operate as a framework for new collective life. The intervention is minimal in physical impact yet expansive in cultural ambition, positioning the building as a shared platform for film, reading, and everyday gathering within a rural context increasingly shaped by migration and change.

 

The Cheng Family Ancestral Hall is preserved intact through a pivoting panel system that introduces all new functions. Developed by the architects, this pivoting panel system sits lightly within the three-bay layout. Inspired by traditional Huizhou construction logic, where structural and infill elements operate separately, it allows new spatial divisions to emerge without compromising the original fabric. Panels open and close to recalibrate thresholds between public and private zones, improving ventilation and protecting the existing timber surfaces from moisture.

 

The structural rhythm of the ancestral hall frames multiple modes of watching, including eye-level seating within the second bay, or from a distance across the entrance courtyard. The screen is never isolated but always embedded within layers of columns, panels, and circulation. Above, an operable shading system enables screenings during the day, turning the courtyard into an adaptable auditorium that shifts with light and activity.

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all images by Qingshan Wu

 

 

a library woven into the structure

 

A mezzanine-level library occupies the upper layer of the hall, where the Shanghai-based team at Atelier Guo  matches high windows and generous proportions with detachable, modular furniture. This flexibility allows the space to host reading sessions as well as informal gatherings, aligning with the broader ambition of the project to support cultural programming and everyday use.

 

Steel elements are wrapped in wood, aligning with the hall’s existing textures, while furniture dimensions are carefully calibrated to sit comfortably within the historic envelope. The project combines off-site prefabrication with on-site assembly by local craftsmen, ensuring both precision and adaptability. Even technical systems, such as the shading mechanism and café services, are integrated with minimal intrusion, preserving the integrity of the heritage structure.

 

As panels pivot and spaces expand or contract, the building continuously redefines itself. Its operation relies on active participation from villagers, proposing a shift in how rural heritage is understood. 

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the village fabric leads toward the hall, positioning the cinema within everyday life

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the ancestral hall exterior is preserved intact

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the courtyard becomes an open-air cinema

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the main screening space is defined by minimal intervention within the ancestral hall