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Cheungvogl Architects Ltd. Shinjuku Gardens Car Park, Gallery
Shinjuku Gardens Car Park, Gallery is Silver Design Award winner in 2013 - 2014 Architecture, Building and Structure Design Award Category.
Shinjuku Gardens Car Park, Gallery

Shinjuku Gardens is an urban intervention, which aims to create a ground for nature to co-exist within the dense city context. The facades and roof-top of the 2 storey parking structure will become a naturally grown biotope. Wild flowers will fill the facades as blank canvases with changing colors all year round in a quest to amalgamate much needed natural landscape into the infrastructure of the city. Inside the car park, street art will be displayed on columns, floor and ceiling, creating an exhibition space for young and established artists.

Shinjuku Gardens Car Park, Gallery
Cheungvogl Architects Ltd. Shinjuku Gardens
Cheungvogl Architects Ltd. Car Park, Gallery
Cheungvogl Architects Ltd. design
Cheungvogl Architects Ltd. design
Cheungvogl Architects Ltd.

Cheungvogl is a multilingual and multicultural international design studio founded by Judy Cheung and Christoph Vogl in 2008. The practice’s creative team is based in Hong Kong with site offices in China and Germany. Their architecture encompasses multiple fields of design, ranging from urban scale through to details of interiors and products. The studio is currently working on projects of different scales in Japan, China, Germany and the Americas. Their projects are renowned for their seamless and subtle approach to amalgamate art into architecture. Judy Cheung and Christoph Vogl consistently redefine boundaries between architecture, art and design. Their projects not only experiment with architectural phenomenon, they often express certain sensitivity through reinterpretation of non-material substances. Their passionate engagement with ‘time’ as an integral part of the palette forms a new typology within the limitless context of space and experiences. They interrupt and express time as an extension of life, which is simply engaged in our everyday experiences. Time is not a measurable ‘unit’; its vague existence is undoubtedly beyond the physical parameters of lengths, widths and heights. Quality is not measured by cubic meters; it is the feeling of contentment, the emotions that one remembers. The simultaneous engagement between time, architecture, art and culture is their passion and commitment.