Architecture

See Inside the World’s Most Beautiful Public Bathroom

A resplendent Chinese mall bathroom is Hanging Gardens of Babylon meets Baz Luhrmann
inside of bathroom
All images are courtesy of SFAP

Nature is calling on the sixth floor of the Xuanwu District’s upscale Deji Plaza mall. Here, a new public washroom transports weary shoppers into a palatial sanctuary packed with plant life, featuring seven dedicated rest and restoration areas designed by Shanghai-based X+Living. “We designed this project hoping to pay tribute to the increasingly distant spring under the current environmental crisis,” says the chief designer and X+Living founder, Li Xiang.

The verdant public bathroom was designed by the Shanghai-based architecture firm X+Living. 

Forms derived from a spring garden—flowers, plants, insects—were deconstructed in the design of the glossy flooring first seen upon entering the washroom’s front corridor, dubbed the Experience Hall. The black and white shapes resemble butterfly wings, the ceiling is gilded with bee-like ornaments, and white flowers spray from a fountain in the hall’s center. On both sides of the aisle, Xiang used double-skin walls; green wallpaper forms the first skin, covered by a curved champagne gold grille as the second. Lavish palms and tropical plants playfully peek out, while flower-inspired lamps line the walls like climbing plants.

Flowers, plants, and insects were deconstructed in the design of the glossy flooring, first seen upon entering the washroom’s front corridor.

Further inside, visitors will reach the lounge, anchored by a plush sofa set custom-designed by X+Living to look like a cluster of blooming flowers that invite visitors to flop down and rest while waiting for friends and family. An accessible washroom with automatic induction doors, illuminated vanities, and green marble sinks inspired by garden fountains sprouts to the left, part of a wing that includes a nursery room and medical room.

Leather and wood with rounded edges were used to keep guests safe. 

The architecture firm hid strip lights around the ceiling to soften the lighting, aiming to create a soothing atmosphere.

Even the urinals in the men’s room were done with elegance and style.

In the nursing room, Xiang hid strip lights around the ceiling to soften the lighting, aiming to create a soothing atmosphere. She also employed leather and wood, rounding all edges and corners to keep guests safe. Quilt-patterned wall insets in the medical room add texture and envelop visitors in a cushioning effect.

The space includes ample space for guests to sit and relax.

Small sofas and wireless charging bases feature in the women’s dressing area.

The lounge is also the separation point for the men’s and women’s washrooms, cleverly denoted by the rose and palm leaf on the signage and containing 9 and 16 stalls, respectively. In both washrooms, there are also dressing areas. Small sofas and wireless charging bases feature in the women’s dressing area for extra comfort during longer stretches of respite.

A close look at the stunning marble sinks.

Driving the humanistic touches was Xiang’s desire to take care of people’s needs; she references a previous safety effort, in which Deji Plaza installed an elevator call button alert system in the mall to locate a lost child quickly. “Humanistic cares like these are buried under the sense of ritual and aesthetics created by the design, and can be only noticed when they are being used,” she says. The generous use of plants, long-revered for their restorative powers, perfectly aligns with her goal to create a recuperative environment.

A look inside of the bathroom shows the space to be accommodating to disabled visitors as well.

Xiang hopes that visitors will be surprised when they enter the space, never imagining that they would stumble upon a garden-like space when going to a washroom in a shopping mall. “In the end, my only hope is that after stripping away the layer of mystery, the project will long exist and become a sanctuary garden that is within the reach of every urban traveler,” she says.