Kong Xiangwei Studio reclaims forest ruin in china
Tucked within the ancient mist-cloaked ridges of Yunnan’s Wuliang Mountains in China, the Phoenix Feather Tea Pavilion by Kong Xiangwei Studio emerges like a silver plume resting gently in the trees. Located on Phoenix Mountain at an elevation of 2,380 meters, the structure perches within a 1,300-acre tea-tourism sanctuary in Bixi Township, Dali Prefecture, a region famed not only for its tea but also as one of China’s vital migratory bird corridors. Every autumn, tens of thousands of birds descend along this ancient route, echoing the mythical image of ‘a hundred birds paying homage to the phoenix.’
With a design language they describe as a ‘light touch on the earth,’ Kong Xiangwei Studio translates the delicate form of the feather into a forest pavilion for birdwatching and reflection. Using slender 14-millimeter galvanized steel rods, the architects trace linear paths through the landscape, their placement mimicking the silver pheasant’s legs as they rise into a sweeping hyperbolic arc, mirroring the gentle curve of a feather midair.
all images by Archi-translator Photography, Kong Xiangwei Studio
a feather touching the earth
It was in a forgotten valley west of a tea homestay – where remnants of earthen dwellings quietly erode into the forest – that inspiration struck the team of Kong Xiangwei Studio. A white silver pheasant’s feather, delicately patterned and edged in silver, landed on the mossy ground like a natural design sketch. This moment sparked the concept of a structure that could echo the lightness, grace, and poetic presence of the bird itself.
The southern end of the pavilion grounds itself with a tea bar and platform, while the eastern tip is supported by only a handful of rods. This subtle shift in structural density creates a sense of suspension, as though the entire frame is caught hovering between sky and forest floor. Clad in silver metallic paint, the steel rods become reactive surfaces for the constantly changing Yunnan sky. Mist tints them in soft blues, sunsets wash them in pinks and purples, and nighttime warmth floods the frame with golden tones, resulting in a feather that never quite looks the same.
the Phoenix Feather Tea Pavilion emerges like a silver plume resting gently in the trees
Phoenix Feather Tea Pavilion mirrors mist and light
Carefully positioned among ancient trees, Kong Xiangwei Studio’s Phoenix Feather Tea Pavilion avoids disturbing its surroundings. The presence of the structure is restrained, composed of a curved steel canopy that slices the sky into a grid of linear apertures, intensifying the experience of looking up, while an end table on the west opens toward dense rainforest, framing the wilderness.
Inside the open-air structure, birdwatchers sit in contemplative silence, gazing outward while also becoming part of the forest’s ongoing rhythms. The architecture itself becomes both frame and participant – intertwined with mist, birdsong, dappled light, and rustling branches. In this shared act of seeing, boundaries dissolve between observer and observed.
More than a scenic rest stop, the Phoenix Feather Tea Pavilion becomes a spiritual threshold, one that honors a millennia-old bird sanctuary. Hovering like a feather caught mid-fall, it invites quiet communion with nature through lightness.
the structure perches within a 1,300-acre tea-tourism sanctuary in Bixi Township
echoing the lightness, grace, and poetic presence
Kong Xiangwei Studio translates the delicate form of the feather into a forest pavilion for birdwatching and reflection
the southern end of the pavilion grounds itself with a tea bar and platform
the eastern tip is supported by only a handful of rods
the shift in structural density creates a sense of suspension
the entire frame is caught hovering between sky and forest floor
the steel rods become reactive surfaces for the constantly changing Yunnan sky
nighttime warmth floods the frame with golden tones
the project avoids disturbing its surroundings
Phoenix Feather Tea Pavilion’s structure is restrained
project info:
name: Phoenix Feather Tea Pavilion
architect: Kong Xiangwei Studio
location: Fenghuang Mountain Tea Estate, Bixi Township, Nanjian County, Dali Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China
design team: Kong Xiangwei, Cui Jun, Gao Zhuojian
photographers: Archi-translator Photography, Kong Xiangwei Studio
The post tea pavilion by kong xiangwei studio floats like a silver feather in chinese rainforest appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.