I don’t do special effects. I do characters. I do creatures.” This statement from the renowned Hollywood special effects master, Stan Winston, resonates with the essence of Golden Stream Residence. It emphasizes that special effects aren’t just about superficial glamour but involve authentically creating entirely new and unique characters or creatures. The birth of Gold-Brown Temporal Residence aligns seamlessly with this perspective.
Throughout the collaborative design process, we sensed the homeowner’s avant-garde thinking and innovative spirit. Infused with inspiration from the film “Tron: Legacy,” a film beloved by the homeowner that symbolizes the interchange between the virtual and the real, fearlessness, and breaking through conventional constraints, these became the primary design concepts for Gold-Brown Temporal Residence.
Golden Stream Residence doesn’t interpret a pre-existing style; rather, it breaks free from defined styles. It uses a fresh visual impact to become the theme of the space. The cinematic atmosphere of virtual and real alternation extends to the spatial imagination. We break the traditional balance of symmetry in spatial perception while maintaining a coordinated proportion among the sofa, dining table, and television. A clever addition of a golden streamline neon light disrupts the spatial equilibrium, evolving the space into a visually avant-garde experience. It showcases a natural yet unassuming structural aesthetic, enhancing the space’s boundless imaginative vitality.
In terms of materials, we utilized dual-colored wood-grain flooring, lines in teal green, contrasting brass, and reflective water spray heads, opting for innovative line structures and material combinations in design details. This further reinforces the homeowner’s avant-garde thinking.
The stylistic positioning of Golden Stream Residence defies conventional definition, simply interpreting the refined new appearance of the homeowner’s personality. It conveys that space is the spiritual axis of design. The more precise, the more detailed; the more classic it becomes.”