BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

Year:

2026

Location:

Suzhou, China

Design Team:

Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) | @big_builds

BIG adds final touches to Suzhou Museum of Contemporary Art

 The Suzhou Museum of Contemporary Art by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) emerges on the banks of Jinji Lake. Designed in collaboration with ARTS Group and Front Inc., and commissioned by Suzhou Harmony Development Group, the 60,000-square-meter complex (find designboom’s previous coverage here) is envisioned as a contemporary reinterpretation of Suzhou’s historic gardens.

 The structure unfolds as a village of twelve interconnected pavilions unified beneath a flowing, ribbon-like roof whose gentle undulations echo tiled eaves. Materialism, a material-led inaugural exhibition curated by the studio, is on view through March 8th, 2026, before the museum temporarily closes and reopens this summer for its grand inauguration. 

BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

all images by Ye Jianyuan, unless stated otherwise

Fluid network of pavilions evokes garden heritage 

Rooted in the cultural identity of Suzhou, BIG’s design draws from the traditional lang (廊), a long, covered corridor that guides visitors through Chinese gardens, transforming it into a fluid network of exhibition spaces, courtyards, and walkways. ‘Suzhou is the cradle of the Chinese garden,’ notes Bjarke Ingels, describing the museum as ‘a garden of pavilions and courtyards’ where architecture and landscape intertwine. Glazed galleries and porticoes link the structures together in what Ingels calls ‘a Chinese knot of interconnected sculpture courtyards and exhibition spaces.’ Seen from above, the stainless steel roofs ripple across the site like a living organism, their gentle curves tracing a silhouette that connects the city to the lake.

 The architects mirror the changing colors of the sky and waters on warm-toned stainless steel and curved glass facades. Inside the museum, daylight filters through clerestories and skylights, creating reflections and shadows across the galleries. Four of the twelve pavilions contain the main exhibition halls, while the remaining spaces host a multifunction hall, theater, restaurant, and grand entrance area. Bridges and tunnels weave between the buildings above and below ground, giving the museum flexible circulation and climatic adaptability. Outside, a sequence of gardens extends the visitor journey toward the lake, where sculpture installations and public paths remain open beyond museum hours.

BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

a sequence of gardens extends the visitor journey toward the lake

Materialism: a prelude to the museum’s opening

For BIG partner Catherine Huang, the project is a tribute to Suzhou’s enduring relationship between architecture and landscape. ‘We envision the lang, a traditional element of Suzhou gardens, gracefully winding through the landscapes and transforming into pavilions,’ she explains. The museum follows China’s GBEL Green Star 2 sustainability certification, addressing technical and social dimensions of environmental design. In 2024, Suzhou MoCA was recognized as a national landmark when it appeared on an official China Post stamp celebrating the city’s urban development around Jinji Lake.

 Materialism reframes architecture through the substances that give it form. Rather than organizing projects by typology or geography, the exhibition groups twenty of BIG’s works according to the materials they are made from, including stone, earth, concrete, metal, glass, wood, fabric, plastic, plants, and recyclate. Seating elements throughout the galleries are fabricated from the very materials on display, turning the exhibition into a tactile, sensory journey through texture, weight, and surface. Visitors encounter architecture not as an image or model alone, but as something to be physically experienced through matter. ‘Due to the nature of the architectural profession, the fate of the project is always decided in the early stages: the concept design or the competition,’ explains Bjarke Ingels. ‘But 90% of our work is what follows, the translation of the idea into reality, the materialization of the fiction into fact. This exhibition is dedicated to the material aspect of our profession.’ Ingels continues: ‘The ideas and concepts are still there, but here the architectural story is told through the materials and the collaborations that made them possible.’


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

the Suzhou Museum of Contemporary Art by BIG emerges on the banks of Jinji Lake


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

the structure unfolds as a village of twelve interconnected pavilions


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

a flowing roof whose gentle undulations echo tiled eaves tops the museum | image byStudio SZ Photo


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

a tribute to Suzhou’s enduring relationship between architecture and landscape | image byStudio SZ Photo


big-bjarke-ingels-group-suzhou-museum-contemporary-art-completion-ribbon-roof-designboom-large03

in 2024, Suzhou MoCA was recognized as a national landmark 


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

BIG’s design draws from the traditional lang (廊)


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

a fluid network of exhibition spaces, courtyards, and walkways


big-bjarke-ingels-group-suzhou-museum-contemporary-art-completion-ribbon-roof-designboom-large01

glazed galleries and porticoes link the structures together


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

a landscape of light, reflection, and interwoven paths


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

four of the twelve pavilions contain the main exhibition halls


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

Materialism invites visitors on a ‘material odyssey’ | image byStudio SZ Photo


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

cubic stools made from various materials | Materialism at BIG’s HQ in Copenhagen, image byYongwon Jo 


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

material samples | Materialism at BIG’s HQ in Copenhagen, image byYongwon Jo 


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

luminous ‘BIG’ sign anchors the entrance to the exhibition | image by Studio SZ Photo & Suzhou MoCA


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

a 1:1 prototype of the Gelephu International Airport’s diagrid structure | Materialism at BIG’s HQ in Copenhagen, image byYongwon Jo 


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

project models and photographs | image by Studio SZ Photo & Suzhou MoCA


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

architecture and landscape intertwine


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

a contemporary reinterpretation of Suzhou’s historic gardens


BIG's suzhou museum of contemporary art opens with 'materialism' exhibition

the museum follows China’s GBEL Green Star 2 sustainability certification | image by Studio SZ Photo


big-bjarke-ingels-group-suzhou-museum-contemporary-art-completion-ribbon-roof-designboom-large02

sculpture installations and public paths remain open beyond museum hours | image by Studio SZ Photo


project info:

name: Suzhou Museum of Contemporary Art

architect: Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG) | @big_builds

location: Suzhou, China

area: 60,000 sqm (646,000 sqft)

client: Suzhou Harmony Development Group Co. Ltd

collaborators: ARTS Group Co. Ltd, Front Inc., Shanghai Shuishi Landscape Design Co. Ltd, Rdesign International Lighting

photographers: Ye Jianyuan, Studio SZ Photo | @studiosz_photo, Yongwon Jo | @yong1jo


thomai tsimpou I designboom (523)

jan 19, 2026

Powering Intelligence,
Empowering Future.

ArAsia

ArAisa Global Art and Architecture Co., Limited

Policy and Terms

Powering Intelligence,
Empowering Future.

ArAsia

ArAisa Global Art and Architecture Co., Limited

Policy and Terms

Powering Intelligence,
Empowering Future.

ArAsia

ArAisa Global Art and Architecture Co., Limited

Policy and Terms

Powering Intelligence,
Empowering Future.

ArAsia

ArAisa Global Art and Architecture Co., Limited

Policy and Terms