dark mode light mode Search
Search

Alberto Caiola Creates Glowing Rooftop Bar In Shanghai

Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola

Dirk Weiblen

Commanding, convivial and named after the Greek goddess of the night, Nyx is a rooftop bar in central Shanghai designed by local studio Alberto Caiola. Inspired by classical architectural ruins and wrapped in UV reactive cords, it affords spectacular city views. A monumental frame for the futuristic metropolis’ backdrop of glowing neon and luminous highways, Nyx offers an alternative, surreal experience in China’s foremost city of lights.

Maintaining a continuous dialogue with its contemporary context, Nyx echoes a distant past while projecting towards an abstract future, blending tropes of cultures and identities. The resulting installation sets a new phygital aesthetic, creating a surreal space-time experience in which visitors can momentarily lose themselves.

A progressive take on the classical colonnade, it combines both the structure’s physical form, as well as social function. In cities spanning Europe and the Middle East, and in particular, Italy, the sheer scale of these grandiose complexes of arches and columns inspire intimacy, while their openness creates a comfortable space for groups to gather and convene.

 Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola

In a city as dense and as populous as Shanghai, these were precisely the qualities that made a modern interpretation of an ancient colonnade so fitting for a bar destination. The structure is wrapped in more than 21,000 meters of UV reactive cord. Black lights activate a glow similar to that of Shanghai’s highways come nightfall – a steady, luminous blue. At the same time, the cords wrapped around the installation’s frame, offer an abstract take on familiar tangles of cable and wire, visible throughout the city both overhead and on buildings.

 Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola

Punctuating the structure’s blue glow are periodic dashes of red. Luminous taps for the bar’s range of over 20 craft beers, they immediately draw attention to the venue’s primary product. Visually separating the bar from the open plan – and open air – space are dramatic arches, framing the venue’s focal point. A literally hand-woven architecture of light, and a temple to Shanghai rituals present and future, Nyx presents Shanghai night owls with an openness that at once draws groups close, and affords spaciousness in an otherwise close-knit city. Projecting a distant past, flanked by futuristic skyscrapers, Nyx presents an alternate perspective to Shanghai’s relentless modernity.

 Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola Nyx Rooftop Bar, Shanghai, China / Alberto Caiola