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Can architecture be fleeting? Check out these transient structures and see

A Zhejiang pavilion takes top honours at the RIBA Asia Pacific Awards, alongside a Hong Kong finalist celebrating the beauty of impermanence

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GN Architects’ Seaside Pavilion, on Chaishan island, Zhejiang province, clinched the Temporary Architecture prize in the 2025 RIBA Asia Pacific Awards. Photo: courtesy GN Architects
Adele Brunner
On a defunct 1960s cargo pier in the Zhoushan archipelago, Zhejiang province, the temporary Seaside Pavilion, built in 2024, stands with a deceptive grace that belies the extreme logistical coordination required to place it there. Prefabricated parts had to be transported to the remote Chaishan island via a multi-stage journey of cargo ships, small trailers and often sheer human effort. The construction team was also frequently forced to perch on surrounding rocks and work with basic handheld machinery.

“Our inspiration came from nature’s simplest gestures – branches extending from a forest’s edge, swaying gently in the sea breeze. The pavilion translates that quiet movement of life into architectural form,” says Shen Lijiang, lead designer and managing partner of GN Architects, the Shanghai-based practice that designed the wind-driven kinetic art installation and community social space as part of the “Hello, Little Island” government revitalisation initiative. Chaishan, once a thriving village, is now home to just 96 elderly residents.

The kinetic art installation and community social space was designed by GN Architects for a community of just 96 elderly people. Photo: courtesy GN Architects
The kinetic art installation and community social space was designed by GN Architects for a community of just 96 elderly people. Photo: courtesy GN Architects

The pavilion’s delicate dance with nature, on an unpredictable stage, culminated in a victory, on December 17, at the inaugural RIBA Asia Pacific Awards, where the Royal Institute of British Architects recognised architectural creativity, innovation and excellence in the region. The ceremony, held in Shenzhen, saw 63 finalists, from 13 countries and regions, compete for 10 awards in not only the temporary architecture category but also those that reflect other evolving priorities in the field, notably artificial intelligence-powered design and future projects (unbuilt or conceptual projects that also resolve major societal problems). Hong Kong’s sole finalist, the E.CO Rotunda, was another project underscoring the beauty of impermanence.

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Melvin Tan, founding partner of Laud Architects in Singapore and jury chair for the Temporary Architecture category, describes these creations as “buildings that have a specific function relating to an event or limited period of time”. The category encompasses installations and short-term structures such as the Seaside Pavilion, which has a lifespan of three to five years.

“There are different requirements and expectations between a temporary building and a permanent one, so a stand-alone category allows the various projects to compete and shine on the same basis and foundation,” he adds. “Temporary architecture is usually not beholden to the array of codes and regulations that permanent structures require and allows architects greater flexibility in their design response to the brief.”

Vietnam’s contender for the temporary architecture prize was The Grid, an adaptive reuse project in Hanoi, Vietnam designed by Ad Hoc Practice. Photo: Trieu Chien
Vietnam’s contender for the temporary architecture prize was The Grid, an adaptive reuse project in Hanoi, Vietnam designed by Ad Hoc Practice. Photo: Trieu Chien

Yet, this very flexibility demanded a resilience that no building code could dictate. The project’s true test arrived when a typhoon struck mid-construction, sweeping materials into the sea. In a moment that defined the pavilion’s purpose, local villagers rescued the drifting components. “That shared effort – between designers and residents – gave the project an even deeper meaning,” says Liu Tong, who was part of the architecture team.

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