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Lan Bistro·Yunnan Restaurant by Funs Creative Design Consultant

Project name:
Lan Bistro·Yunnan Restaurant
Architecture firm:
Funs Creative Design Consultant
Location:
Shuhe Ancient Town, Li Jiang, Yunnan, China
Photography:
He Chuan from Here Space
Principal architect:
Robin Luo
Design team:
Zhou Zengni, Zhang Hongming, Mu Pei
Interior design:
Collaborators:
Built area:
2100 m²
Site area:
Design year:
Completion year:
2025
Civil engineer:
Structural engineer:
Environmental & MEP:
Construction:
Landscape:
Lighting:
Oway Lighting
Supervision:
Material:
Visualization:
Tools used:
Budget:
Undisclosed
Client:
Private
Status:
Complete
Typology:
Hospitality › Restaurant

Funs Creative Design Consultant: Nestled within the thousand-year-old tapestry of Shuhe Ancient Town, Lan Bistro · Yunnan gazes out toward the majestic peaks of Jade Dragon Snow Mountain. With “dissolving boundaries” at its core, the project boldly confronts the homogenized commercial sprawl of the old town—reimagining space through a modern lens to create a hidden oasis that links snowcapped mountains, dense forests, and the vibrant pulse of daily life.

Architecture · Naturally Grown

In the design, we intentionally broke away from the traditional sense of enclosure, allowing the space to grow organically like a living plant through a semi-open structure.

In response to the surrounding environment, we wrapped the garden in native bamboo nodes, using winding pathways and lush vegetation to construct a three-part spatial rhythm of shelter–transition–reveal. This 300-meter entrance journey becomes a ritual-like passage of psychological cleansing.

Beneath the woven bamboo curves lies a sturdy steel frame, hidden from view. Clusters of bamboo shoot up from the ground, piercing through the floor slabs with supple grace, holding aloft the second-floor bamboo canopy—as if the building itself were sprouting naturally from the earth.

Garden · Between Inside and Out

At the heart of the garden, a reflecting pool serves as a natural canvas—mirroring the bamboo dome above and the distant silhouette of the snowcapped mountains.

A wooden bridge links various functional areas, while greenery and handcrafted parasols create a semi-enclosed transitional space. This design not only breaks away from the traditional courtyard's inward-facing seclusion but also grants the restaurant flexible operation across all hours of the day. By day, it transforms into an open-air market; by dusk, it shifts into a social lounge; and at night, it becomes an intimate scenic retreat.

Thoughtfully placed elements like the snow mountain viewing deck and waterside booth seating anchor the visual experience. Tiered landscape dining areas follow a pricing strategy that encourages longer visits—while laying the groundwork for a future of diverse and layered uses within the space.

Space · A Return to Essence

Material selection serves as the spatial grammar that articulates the atmosphere. Rough-hewn stone walls contrast vividly with the delicate bamboo-woven ceiling—not through clichéd displays of ethnic motifs, but by evoking cultural resonance through material memory and spatial storytelling.

Fieldstone, bluestone slabs, reclaimed timber, and bamboo structures silently echo the historical texture of the ancient Tea-Horse Road. Sunlight filters through the bamboo canopy, scattering shifting patterns across the stone walls.

by nightfall, strings of lights sway gently in the breeze from bamboo branches, casting a warm golden glow that reflects in the still surface of the pond. Copper wall sconces line the stone façade, their soft lantern-like halos bathing the building in a warm, inviting radiance.

Epilogue

In the design of Lan Bistro · Yunnan, nature becomes the thread, time the medium. Together, they shape a space stripped of noise, pared down to its essence. Between light and shadow, one is invited to pause, to reflect—to feel, through the body, the honest resonance between architecture, material, and nature in its purest form.


By Alfredo Gonzalez

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