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Bookstore: The Latest Architecture and News

MVRDV Receives Approval for Plum Village Buddhist Monastery Renovations in France

The Plum Village Buddhist Monastery in southern Dordogne, France, has received construction approval for the first phase of its ongoing collaboration with Dutch architecture studio MVRDV. The approvals cover the Upper Hamlet masterplan phase, including the construction of new guest houses and the renovation and expansion of the monastery's bookshop, as well as a new nunnery building at the Lower Hamlet. Developed in collaboration with co-architect MoonWalkLocal and consultants OTEIS, VPEAS, and Emacoustic, the wider project includes two masterplans for the Monastery's Upper and Lower Hamlets, four communal guest houses, a new nunnery, and the transformation of an existing bookshop. Working on a non-profit basis, the design team prioritises renovation alongside the use of circular and bio-based materials, aligning the architectural approach with the monastery's philosophical principles. The proposed additions aim to better accommodate the annual visitors who travel to Plum Village to engage with the teachings of Engaged Buddhism.

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The Continuous Project: A Case of Iterative Placemaking in Long You, China

The architect's role has traditionally been relatively well-defined: design a building, direct the project, coordinate logistics, and guide construction through to completion. As specialised fields have proliferated, together with a rapidly changing social economy, the practice of architecture has diversified, opening multiple paths for how architects can contribute to society.

Since the 1980s, one of the most consistent shifts may have been the separation between the "design architect" and the "architect of record." Where a single office once carried a project from concept to completion, internationalisation—alongside cross-border work, licensure regimes, procurement models, and liability structures—has encouraged a split. Design teams increasingly set the conceptual and schematic direction, then hand over the design development to local record architects for technical detailing, approvals, and site execution. The model has clear advantages—sharper expertise, efficiency, and often profitability (or services offered at reduced fees)—but it also segments the profession and can distance authorship from delivery.

What, then, might the next shift be, and what new synergies could redefine the architect's role? How should architects adapt to the changing professional climate? One promising trajectory is a turn from singular, permanent objects toward ongoing placemaking—iterative, context-specific programmes that prototype, test, and refine spatial ideas in public. Rather than producing one large, iconic work that fixes a site for decades, this model privileges cycles of making, use, evaluation, and adjustment at the community scale.

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Spaces for Browsing: Balancing Commerce and Community in the Design of Bookstores

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The contemporary bookstore is a paradoxical space. It is commercial, but rarely commercialized; public, but often privately owned; small in scale, but expansive in impact. As adjacent architectural typologies evolve under the pressures of digital consumption, economic precarity, and changing social habits, the bookstore has not dimensioned, but adapted to the twenty first century. It is not a site for private or institutional literary exchange, but a spatial hybrid that accommodates ritual, rest, performance, and socialization.

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Antiquarian Book Shop in Jimbocho / n o t architects studio

Antiquarian Book Shop in Jimbocho / n o t architects studio - Interior Photography, StoreAntiquarian Book Shop in Jimbocho / n o t architects studio - Interior Photography, Store, Kitchen, TableAntiquarian Book Shop in Jimbocho / n o t architects studio - Interior Photography, Store, Kitchen, TableAntiquarian Book Shop in Jimbocho / n o t architects studio - Interior Photography, Store, FacadeAntiquarian Book Shop in Jimbocho / n o t architects studio - More Images+ 14

Chiyoda City, Japan

Chongqing Zhongshuge Bookstore / X+Living

Chongqing Zhongshuge Bookstore / X+Living - Interior DesignChongqing Zhongshuge Bookstore / X+Living - Interior DesignChongqing Zhongshuge Bookstore / X+Living - Interior DesignChongqing Zhongshuge Bookstore / X+Living - Interior DesignChongqing Zhongshuge Bookstore / X+Living - More Images+ 10

  • Interior Designers: X+Living
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1300
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2019
  • Manufacturers Brands with products used in this architecture project
    Manufacturers:  AutoDesk, Dulux, Formica, TAIWANGLASS

MUDA-Architects Wins "The Most Beautiful Bookstore in Chengdu" Competition

With 486 applicants and 249 conceptual plans received, MUDA-Architects stood out from the 20 finalists and won the first prize in "The Most Beautiful Bookstore in Chengdu" competition. The competition was sponsored by the Chengdu Tianfu New Area Investment Group, China Southwest Architectural Design and Research Institute, and co-sponsored by Chengdu Yi Zhu Yi Shi Culture Communication Ltd.

MUDA-Architects Wins "The Most Beautiful Bookstore in Chengdu" Competition  - Films & ArchitectureMUDA-Architects Wins "The Most Beautiful Bookstore in Chengdu" Competition  - Films & ArchitectureMUDA-Architects Wins "The Most Beautiful Bookstore in Chengdu" Competition  - Films & ArchitectureMUDA-Architects Wins "The Most Beautiful Bookstore in Chengdu" Competition  - Films & ArchitectureMUDA-Architects Wins The Most Beautiful Bookstore in Chengdu Competition  - More Images+ 13

Space 4 Architecture's Proposed Bookstore in Chengdu, China Embodies Floating Water Lilies

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Space 4 Architecture's Proposed Bookstore in Chengdu, China Embodies Floating Water Lilies  - Image 5 of 4
Aerial View. Image Courtesy of Space4Architecture

Space 4 Architecture's (S4A) proposal for a bookstore in Chengdu, China reflects the poetic beauty of floating lilies on water. The architects describe the project as a “permeable cultural container” that allows and encourages visitor interaction with the surrounding landscape. The design consists of a series of indoor and outdoor spaces that weave together a gentle intervention that mirrors and enhances the natural scenery it sits within.

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Longshang Books Cafe / atelier mearc

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Xuhui, China

Xi’an Zhongshu Bookstore / Wutopia Lab

Xi’an Zhongshu Bookstore / Wutopia Lab - Store, Stairs, HandrailXi’an Zhongshu Bookstore / Wutopia Lab - StoreXi’an Zhongshu Bookstore / Wutopia Lab - StoreXi’an Zhongshu Bookstore / Wutopia Lab - Store, Arch, Facade, StairsXi’an Zhongshu Bookstore / Wutopia Lab - More Images+ 25

Xian Shi, China

Call Me MOSAIC Bookstore / TurtleHill

Call Me MOSAIC Bookstore / TurtleHill - Interior Design, FacadeCall Me MOSAIC Bookstore / TurtleHill - Interior Design, FacadeCall Me MOSAIC Bookstore / TurtleHill - Interior Design, FacadeCall Me MOSAIC Bookstore / TurtleHill - Interior DesignCall Me MOSAIC Bookstore / TurtleHill - More Images+ 25

Yanjiyou Bookstore / Karv One

Yanjiyou Bookstore  / Karv One - Store, Beam, FacadeYanjiyou Bookstore  / Karv One - Store, Beam, Facade, ColumnYanjiyou Bookstore  / Karv One - Store, Beam, Facade, TableYanjiyou Bookstore  / Karv One - Store, ColumnYanjiyou Bookstore  / Karv One - More Images+ 29

Hangzhou, China

Metal Rainbow-Zhongshu Bookstore in Suzhou / Wutopia Lab

Metal Rainbow-Zhongshu Bookstore in Suzhou / Wutopia Lab - StoreMetal Rainbow-Zhongshu Bookstore in Suzhou / Wutopia Lab - StoreMetal Rainbow-Zhongshu Bookstore in Suzhou / Wutopia Lab - StoreMetal Rainbow-Zhongshu Bookstore in Suzhou / Wutopia Lab - StoreMetal Rainbow-Zhongshu Bookstore in Suzhou / Wutopia Lab - More Images+ 41

Suzhou City, China

Atelier Global Wins Competition to Design 'Book City' in Shenzhen

Atelier Global has been announced as the winners of a competition for the architectural and interior design of 'Shenzhen Book City,' a library and public gathering space located at the heart of the Long Hua arts district, becoming a part of the greater contemporary and historic fabric of art centers, public parks and urban typologies.

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Zhongshuge Bookstore / X+Living

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Chengdu, China
  • Interior Designers: X+Living
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2017

Zhongshuge Bookstore / Li Xiang

Zhongshuge Bookstore / Li Xiang - StoreZhongshuge Bookstore / Li Xiang - StoreZhongshuge Bookstore / Li Xiang - Store, FacadeZhongshuge Bookstore / Li Xiang - Store, BeamZhongshuge Bookstore / Li Xiang - More Images+ 22

Shanghai, China
  • Architects: Li Xiang
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016

Yangzhou Zhongshuge / Li Xiang

Yangzhou, China
  • Architects: Li Xiang
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  1000
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016

Reedom Bookstore / Cao Pu

Reedom Bookstore / Cao Pu - Store, Chair, TableReedom Bookstore / Cao Pu - Store, Facade, Balcony, CityscapeReedom Bookstore / Cao Pu - StoreReedom Bookstore / Cao Pu - Store, Table, ChairReedom Bookstore / Cao Pu - More Images+ 21

  • Architects: Cao Pu
  • Area Area of this architecture project Area:  60
  • Year Completion year of this architecture project Year:  2016

Livraria da Vila / Isay Weinfeld

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Livraria da Vila / Isay Weinfeld - Image 9 of 4
Frontal view © Leonardo Finotti

Brazilian architecture has produced interesting works in the business/retail area, often limited to just interior design. Recent works by Marcio Kogan, Marcelo Alvarango or Tao Arquitetura are good examples of a tradition that, in my personal opinion, has a peak at Mendes da Rocha’s Forma store in Sao Paulo. If you ever go to Sao Paulo to visit local architecture, don´t be afraid of your girlfriend/wife taking you to shopping, there´s lots to see there.

Leonardo Finotti shared with us an interesting project by local architect Isay Weinfeld that is up to this brazilian standard, the Libraria da Vila bookstore in Sao Paulo. An hermetic volume with a pivoting book facade contains an interesting space filled with books distributed over 3 levels as you can see on the photos: