Revitalization of The Relic Site of Yongle Palace / URBANUS - Image 1 of 40© TAL

Revitalization of The Relic Site of Yongle Palace / URBANUS - Interior Photography, Arch, Concrete, ArcadeRevitalization of The Relic Site of Yongle Palace / URBANUS - Interior Photography, StairsRevitalization of The Relic Site of Yongle Palace / URBANUS - Interior Photography, Concrete, CourtyardRevitalization of The Relic Site of Yongle Palace / URBANUS - Exterior PhotographyRevitalization of The Relic Site of Yongle Palace / URBANUS - More Images+ 35

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https://www.archdaily.com/1032471/revitalization-of-the-relic-site-of-yongle-palace-urbanus

  • Area
    Area of this architecture project

    Area: 
    3808

  • Year
    Completion year of this architecture project

    Year: 


    2024

  • Photographs

Revitalization of The Relic Site of Yongle Palace / URBANUS - Interior Photography, Concrete, Courtyard© TAL

Text description provided by the architects. Creating a Dual Spatial Configuration
Only a small part of the original temple site is legally buildable, while the rest are basic farmlands. Within these constraints, a dual spatial configuration is adopted to reflect both the heritage of Lv Ancestral Home and the historical temple site. The west side builds on the base of current ancestral shrine to create a renewed cultural field, while the east focuses on evoking the memory of the original Yongle Palace. Visitors come from the west to search for the east, retracing a path that begins from informal vitality and ends with a structured ritual experience, reviving the historical interplay between everyday life and official sanctity.

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