Junyue Technology Hangzhou Headquarters Office Furniture Accessories Display Space: Lightweight Creation Connection
Design team: Ruan Hao, He Yulou, Lai Zhenyu; Xie Jie, Xu Sheng, Zhou Miao, Zhang Yang, Yu Jiaqi, Wang Danlu
Address: Hangzhou, China
Area: 5000 square meters
Keywords: home accessories, Hangzhou headquarters, exhibition hall design, office environment, commercial and furniture, open space
In 2025, a 5000 square meter building in the northern industrial park of Hangzhou was officially unveiled. This is not an ordinary office building, but a "space laboratory" created by Junyue Technology for the world's top furniture brands. The headquarters space, led by Ruan Hao, He Yulou, and Lai Zhenyu from Zero One City Architecture Firm, reconstructs the boundary between office environment and exhibition hall design with the imagery of "cloud", allowing the technological sense of home accessories and the integration of commerce and furniture to be presented to the extreme in an open space.
Since its establishment in 2013, Junyue Technology has always focused on furniture electrification solutions, and its products have empowered international brands such as Herman Miller, Steelcase, and HAWORTH. This headquarters space is not only a carrier of corporate image, but also a practice of extending the concept of "connection" from products to space - through flowing layout, transparent vision, and scene based display, allowing every visitor to intuitively experience how "furniture electrification" is reshaping modern space.
































Cloud Sea Tide Generation: Breaking the Inherent Boundaries of Buildings with Curves
The design of the entrance hall immediately subverts the stereotype of traditional office spaces. The two-story atrium is surrounded by a low hanging "cumulus cloud" installation, with white curves hanging from the ceiling, naturally connecting the exhibition halls at both ends with the conference area. This design that breaks down the barriers between walls and floors is a direct expression of the concept of open space - when the line of sight extends along the direction of the "clouds", the hierarchy of the space is no longer limited by physical structure, but is replaced by a sense of lightness like wandering in the clouds.
The open rest area set up around the glass conference room on the first floor, with the posture of "opening the door to welcome guests", dissolves the seriousness of business negotiations; The second floor multifunctional hall creates a visual effect of floating in the air through the combination of grille and glass. The most eye-catching conference area, the "cloud staircase," integrates the ceiling, walls, and stairs with white linear elements. When visitors climb up the stairs, the boundaries of conventional architectural elements are completely blurred, just like Junyue Technology's innovative breakthrough in furniture electrification - creating connections in seemingly impossible places.
Cloud Depth: Let the product grow naturally in the scene
The exhibition hall design is the core highlight of this headquarters. The first floor product exhibition hall adopts grid and linear elements to divide the space. Junyue's electrified products are like nodes of a "spatial matrix", distributed in various functional areas: the display desk in the center of the matrix provides real-time explanations, and the surrounding areas are arranged in a scene based manner to present solutions for different scenarios such as home, office, education, and medical care in a three-dimensional manner. Visitors walk among them, as if shuttling through parallel spaces, intuitively experiencing how the same accessory can adapt to the needs of different scenarios.
The second floor exhibition hall uses time as the narrative thread. The black "Honor Exhibition Hall" houses the past achievements of the enterprise, and stepping out of the exhibition hall leads to the "Time and Space Corridor" - the timeline of the enterprise's major events guiding visitors towards the interactive area of the simulated production factory. This "past present future" interconnected design elevates the relationship between business and furniture beyond product transactions to a shared exploration of industry trends. When customers stand at the end of the corridor, they can not only touch Junyue's technological accumulation, but also see the landing effect of the solution, and the space itself becomes the most powerful 'salesperson'.
Cloud Step Walk: Creating a symbiotic office ecosystem for E and I people
The office environment design on the 9th and 10th floors once again interprets the deep meaning of 'connection'. In response to the lighting issue caused by the offset of the original building's core tube, the design team boldly opened two floors and introduced electric skylights to create a "vibrant atrium" where sunlight and air flow freely. The "Cloud Ladder Corridor" that connects the two levels in the center has become a spatial hub. The white grille structure projects flowing light and shadow under the sunlight, presenting different scenes as the sun rises and sets, creating a "thinking space" for employees during work breaks.
The planning of the office area precisely balances the needs of openness and privacy. Taking "efficient privacy" and "open communication" as the horizontal axis, the design team divided the space into four gradients: a fully enclosed telephone booth to meet the focused needs of I people, a glass box office area that balances privacy and collaboration, a grille box that encourages semi open discussions, and a fully open shared office area that becomes a social stage for E people. The organic combination of open spaces and private areas allows employees with different work habits to find their own way, which confirms Junyue Technology's space philosophy of "tolerance, fairness, and flexibility".
From product to space, from function to experience, Junyue Technology's Hangzhou headquarters uses a 5000 square meter area to demonstrate how home accessories empower the entire chain of business and furniture through design. When visitors leave, they not only take away their understanding of the product, but also a new imagination of how space can connect people and technology - perhaps the most successful "work" of the Zero One City design team: making the building itself a talking brand business card.