‘beijing house II’ by yaohua wang architecture, beijing, china all images courtesy of yaohua wang architecture

china-based yaohua wang architecture has proposed ‘beijing house II’, a single family residence located within an historical district in beijing, china. attached to an existing and retired factory building, the cantilevered structure utilizes the available air space above the street. this design resists the recent prevalence of large scale residential towers, and aspires to revive an interest in restoring the independent housing typology into urban areas.

a mechanical system to resist the region’s frequent earthquakes has been revealed with the exterior appearance, while the interior arrangement fluidly responds to the formal constraints imposed by the bracing system. the suspended and modest program of bedrooms, studio space and a green room are provided with unique views of the urban landscape.

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II projecting and cantilevering from the adjacent existing building

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II upward view from below

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II street view

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II aerial view

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II interior view

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II section

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II section

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II section

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II elevations

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II diagrams

yaohua wang architecture: beijing house II exploded axon project info:

info: beijing house ii architect: yaohua wang architecture location: beijing, china structural engineer: organization group client: confidential site: an historical factory area in beijing, which no longer working as a factory anymore program: single-family residence and creative studio size: 500 m² cost: 2 million USD completion: 2015 note: project under schematic design phase

designboom has received this project from our ‘DIY submissions’ feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication.