The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya serves both the aesthetic and commercial needs of the town. It melds small town aesthetics with urban ideas to create a functional yet pleasing project that serves the community well. 

Located in Qin Huang Dao Shi, China, the building resides in a well-known luxury town which has been accused of classism in the past. It’s also a small cultural hub within that area of China, and a beachside community that’s close to the city of Beijing.

Front view of the building. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
Front view of the building. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.

Built by Atelier Z+ with lead architects Zhou Wei and Zhang Bin, they envisioned a structure that minimized obstruction to the seaside views of the area. The architects sought for a distinctive but unobtrusive place, one that comes together with the seaside view and a nearby park in the area.

Modernizing Traditional Design

The design of The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya uses only one storey for the grocery and different stores in the building. It uses a grey monochrome look for its steel rooftops, which aesthetically aligns with the unpolished concrete used for the exterior. In certain parts of the market, the roof slopes upward to provide additional ceiling space, with clerestory windows filtering in natural light.

One of the skylights from The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
One of the skylights from The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.

Restaurants populate much of the building. These places utilize food court-style tabling indoors to maximize the use of space, with many placed near windows. To reduce congestion, the restaurants and bakery areas have take-out windows where one can pick up their food easily. 

The take-out nook of one of the stores. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The take-out nook of one of the stores. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.

The interior design creates a minimalist futuristic look with the bright white and pastel colors and a mix of wood and plastic. The ceilings, if they’re not high, have a half-circle radius repeating across the building. Rooms with high ceilings and skylights present its area differently, sometimes with smoothened stone and sometimes with wood, creating a more open and naturalistic environment.  

Bright, well-lit ceilings for an entrance of the building. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
Bright, well-lit ceilings for an entrance of the building. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The skylight seen while the market is closed. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The skylight seen while the market is closed. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The skylight and ceiling seen from one of the restaurants. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The skylight and ceiling seen from one of the restaurants. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.

Its design allows for public areas like plazas, filling open spaces with trees and greenery as a way of linking back to the environment surrounding it.

Working for the Environment Around Us

This market contains a strong “framework,” so to speak, in the way it distinguishes different portions of the building. While the main areas and public plaza use the steel frame structure, the distinct shops and eateries use the rooms with the high roofs within the building. The architects said that they did this as a way of “[enhancing] the experiential quality of the spatial content.” 

Eating and food court area of The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
Eating and food court area of The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The inside of the building in the morning. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The inside of the building in the morning. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The half-circle ceiling. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The half-circle ceiling. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
Exterior look of The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
Exterior look of The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The building with one of the take-out nooks in view. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.
The building with one of the take-out nooks in view. Photo by Shengliang Su and Min Yang.

It plays around with the industrial exterior of different parts of the framework. Moreover, it marries together the modern minimalist style of the interiors and the cottage-industrial style of the exterior (mixing small town aesthetics with big-town industrial building language). It’s fancy, and yet still it harkens back to marketplaces of the past in its accessibility and consumer language.

The Marketplace of North Coast Aranya executes its need of an unobtrusive public space with aplomb. The architects created a structure that co-exists with the nature around it while maximizing its use of a space for the needs of the community. 

Related reading: The Aranya Art Center: Filling The Need For A Creative Space

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