Starting from the West, industrial revolution began to affect the change of times throughout the world in the 1760s; the invention and application of a new power machine, the steam engine, marked the beginning of the Age of Steam. Plant facilities with oil tanks and steel pipes became an important symbol of that glorious age and, even more so, the power behind these symbols contributed to the birth of the capitalist world system.
With the advent and popularity of computers in the 21st century, the invisible Information Age deduced and changed the humanity and commercial mode of the physical world. X+Living designed Powerlong Ideas Lab to be a place where more information for learning is created and spread, with the hope of completing joint research and information technology development through interactions with consumers and information technology creators. The design goal is to explore the hidden business value of the aforementioned era through a multifunctional space.
There are no iconic symbols for the Information Age, which is more defined by the amount and efficiency of information. So, while designing this lab, X+Living based and mapped it on the symbol of the previous era, inferring that they share some common traits. For example, both eras were marked by subversive technology and research, and both have contributed greatly to the development of business.
For the shape of the whole space, while factories of the Age of Steam were considered as the prototype, the firm cut off the most complex parts in order to retain only the most basic functional parts, including practical compositions such as reaction tanks, energy delivery pipes, and walking platforms for engineers. These main functional parts also reflect corresponding activities which will occur on the site.