Aitu art
Project entrustment: Design team of mygym International Children's Education Center: existing buildings | Zhong, Zhao Zhixing, Rao Gang, Huang, indoor area: 206 square meters, Beijing, China.

Ai Tu Tu Children's Art Center is located on the top floor of a large shopping mall, with its storefront facing the atrium and skylight lighting. In order to avoid external interference and introduce natural light into the room as much as possible, the wall parallel to the direction of the public veranda is penetrated by vertical glass, forming a rhythm of alternating reality and reality with widths of 20 cm and 40 cm respectively. This order not only determines the form of plane layout, but also runs through the composition of indoor space from floor to wall to ceiling.

The Art Center covers an area of about 206 square meters and consists of four studios, reception area, rest area, inner corridor and management auxiliary rooms.

The hollow wall parallel to the public verandah brings light, sight and space layer by layer, while the vertical wall perpendicular to the verandah becomes the carrier of various functions, including foreground background wall, work display wall, graffiti wall, painting cabinet, washbasin, coffee table and locker.

The vertical wall facing the balcony is painted with magenta, yellow and blue respectively, and the colors extend indoors along the side of the vertical wall and the groove of the ceiling, and extend from the ground to the ceiling to the colored surface on the vertical wall. Randomly arranged and combined colors add a sensitive and changeable side to the original rational and rigorous spatial structure.

Under the irradiation of light, the reflections of parallel color planes are superimposed, resulting in different degrees of orange, green and purple deviation. Stripes of colored rubber floor penetrate from one room to another, breaking the boundaries of space, and together with the colored edges of walls and ceilings, outline a nested landscape frame, like a series of space slices, which enhances the depth of space and creates a colorful atmosphere.

Tu Tu's figure is marked by splashing paint. Curved contours appear in glass doors, foreground background walls and student art exhibition walls in different proportions, which are in contrast and complementary relationship with horizontal and vertical spatial backgrounds.

This is a small world composed of lines, colors, light and space. We hope it can infect the children who come here and stimulate their artistic imagination and curiosity.