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Orange, right? A color that tends to divide the room. Some people swear by it, others avoid it like a questionable paint choice from the early 2000s. Trends have pushed it in and out of fashion, and yet, it never quite disappears. Maybe that is because orange carries a certain energy that architecture sometimes needs.
It can signal warmth, movement, even a bit of mischief. A flash of orange can guide people through a building, call attention to a structure, or give a space a sense of life. The projects below show architects leaning into that attitude. No hesitation. Just confident, unapologetic orange doing exactly what it does best.
Design of kiosks and observation decks in Wuhan Tianhe Airport T2
By UAO Design, Wuhan, China

At Wuhan Tianhe Airport T2, UAO Design faced a tricky challenge: introduce new kiosks and observation decks into an almost finished terminal, and do it fast. Their answer was a lightweight architectural system built from stainless steel frames and prefabricated modules based on a grid, allowing the structures to arrive ready for quick assembly with minimal disruption.
Columns wrapped in translucent Plexiglas filter the daylight from above, casting soft color across the concourse. Then thermal orange steps into the scene. Warm and unmistakable, the color cuts through the airport’s pale interior, shifting as the light changes and turning these modest pavilions into lively markers that catch the eye and invite travelers to pause.
Porcelain Factory Plugin Revival
By People’s Architecture Office, Jingdezhen, China
PAO approached the regeneration of this former porcelain factory with a clear idea: add new life without erasing the old one. Their “plugin architecture” strategy inserts contemporary elements into the preserved workshops. New rooms, stairs and walkways slip inside the historic shell while a glass pavilion anchors the public square.
Brick vaults and tall chimneys still tell the story of ceramic production. Then comes the orange. Bold and warm, it cuts through the muted brick palette. The color recalls the glow of kiln fires and hot clay. These flashes of orange mark new spaces and guide visitors, giving the historic complex a fresh pulse.
Go-Green Biomass Power Plant
By Urbansense Arquitectura e Planeamento, Constância, Portugal
You could spot this power plant from a distance, and that is very much the point. Instead of hiding the machinery behind neutral cladding, Urbansense Arquitectura e Planeamento gave the new biomass facility a façade that openly celebrates the process inside. Curving dark grey metal panels wrap the main volumes, but the boiler house is wrapped in translucent orange polycarbonate. The color proudly marks the place where energy is produced, turning the technical core into the building’s visual center.
During the day, the orange surface cuts through the muted industrial surroundings. At night, the illuminated interior turns the structure into a glowing landmark, a warm signal of the site’s shift toward fossil-free energy.
Hampi Art Labs
By Sameep Padora and Associates, Hampi, India


Hampi Art Labs by Sameep Padora and Associates, Hampi, India | Photographed by Studio Recall
Set against the rocky landscape of Hampi, this art campus rises from the ground with a low, flowing form that follows the curves of the nearby Tungabhadra River. Studio Recall shaped the galleries as a series of earth-like mounds that open into quiet courtyards and shaded passages. The surfaces carry a deep iron-oxide orange, drawn from the region’s soil and stone.
In the strong southern light, the color feels confident and grounded. It ties the architecture to the landscape while giving the complex a clear identity from afar. Against green vegetation and a wide blue sky, the orange walls glow with warmth, turning the campus into a sculptural landmark.
Coach Airways
By Spacemen, Malacca, Malaysia
An abandoned Boeing 747 in Malacca now hosts one of the most unexpected interiors around. Designed by Coach NY with local studio Spacemen, the aircraft was transformed into a retail and café experience that nods to the glamour of 1970s air travel. Visitors move through a sequence of cabins that mix retro aviation details with playful retail displays.
Then comes the café at the rear of the plane, and the mood shifts. The entire space is drenched in orange. Seats, walls, counters, everything. The color brings warmth to the metallic shell of the aircraft and turns the cabin into a glowing, almost cinematic setting that feels lifted straight from a retro-futurist dream.
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