White Cave Gallery

White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin

WHITE CAVE GALLERY

123 architects

ARCHITECTS
123 Architects

LEAD ARCHITECT
Kazushi Miyamoto

PROJECT ARCHITECT
Xiyangzi Cao

MANUFACTURERS
Nippon Paint, Corian, Dagu, Kvadrat

LIGHTING CONSULTANT
Shunchao Bao

PHOTOGRAPHS
Weiqi Jin, Kazushi Miyamoto

AREA
236 m²

YEAR
2020

LOCATION
Beijing, China

CATEGORY
Retail Interiors

White Cave Gallery
© Kazushi Miyamoto

White Cave is a retail and gallery space on the first floor of a building surrounded by skyscrapers in central Beijing. The shop not only sells clothes, but various designer pieces such as furniture and paintings; and has been conceived as a flexible design to accommodate its unique wares, while still being functional.

White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin
White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin

There is ample room for displaying products in a distinctive way, while a VIP room gives notable customers a futuristic space where they can shop in privacy. The existing all-glass façade has been finessed with a voluminous 1.5 m deep display space that draws passers-by in.

Contrasting the mega-scale urban space of vast roads and skyscrapers that surround it, the design provides an unexpected escape that offers an inviting and intimate experience.

Just as the first recordings of art started within a cave, the aim has been to design a space that encourages you to be creative and imagine alternate possibilities – not just a simple box, but a place where space and body interact with each other in curiosity.

White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin
White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin

A display space runs along the façade. To the right of the entrance, it is characterised by a large cavernous opening that draws one’s eye toward the back of the store, offering a glimpse into the interior.

To the left of the entrance, the exterior wall is outfitted with instant dimming glass to create privacy when needed.

The interior space is a canvas of white walls and concrete floors, with a ceiling that animates the space.

White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin
White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin

In order to secure as much of the spatial height as possible, the ceiling’s surface swells like waves, creating high and low areas that organically, and intuitively, conceal piping, such as existing ducts.

Lighting is placed within the highest points of the ceiling, creating the appearance of lightwells, as if natural light is pouring into the ‘cave.’

The VIP room is located behind the display space along the façade.

White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin
White Cave Gallery
© Kazushi Miyamoto

Through the use of instant dimming glass along with the exterior glazing, it becomes frosted, offering a private room for use by VIP customers.

When privacy isn’t necessary, it can serve as a large display space that can be seen from the outside.

It is furnished with silver tufted sofas, accompanied by illuminated glass floors and a tented ceiling, forming an interior that is at once classical, yet futuristic.

White Cave Gallery
© Kazushi Miyamoto
White Cave Gallery
© Kazushi Miyamoto


White Cave Gallery
© Kazushi Miyamoto
White Cave Gallery
© Kazushi Miyamoto
White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin
White Cave Gallery
© Weiqi Jin


White Cave Gallery
plan

White Cave Gallery
analysis diagram