Lead Architect: Yixuan Liu, Yilin Zhang
Within Reach begins with a refusal: hospice care should not be hidden.
Across contemporary cities, end-of-life facilities are pushed to the urban edge or buried deep within hospital interiors. Both conditions rely on isolation as protection. They reduce visibility, increase spatial depth, and sever death from everyday life. What results is not only marginalization, but a secondary exile: patients are withdrawn from the city, and caregivers are withdrawn from their own social lives. Privacy is preserved, yet relational density collapses.
This project argues that the crisis of hospice care is not atmospheric. It is structural. When spatial systems compress connections, dignity loses its social ground.
Within Reach repositions hospice care within Baitasi, one of Beijing’s most spatially integrated pedestrian districts. Instead of occupying the margins, the building is inserted into the city’s connective network. End-of-life care remains embedded in daily urban rhythms, allowing social continuity to persist even at the threshold of life.
The architecture operates through three deliberate spatial thresholds.
At its center, the patient layer restores perceptual agency. Conventional hospice rooms frame a single controlled view, limiting engagement to stillness. Within Reach constructs a layered field of perception: the subtle rhythm of caregiving nearby, the presence of family at mid-distance, and the slow movement of courtyard light beyond. Articulated walls and offset openings allow patients to see without exposure. When mobility diminishes, vision becomes participation. The final form of dignity is the ability to witness and remain situated within a shared world.
Encircling this core, a caregiver layer prevents secondary exile. In many institutions, caregivers are spatially confined to emotionally dense corridors of duty, their identities reduced to singular roles. Here, they occupy a ring of moderate integration: directly connected to patients, yet equally connected to neighborhood life. Terraces, shared gardens, and communal rooms create moments of ordinary social exchange. Care is no longer spatially totalizing. Social opportunity is preserved alongside responsibility.
The outermost layer negotiates how death appears in the city. It neither conceals nor performs. Street-facing gardens and shared everyday amenities participate in pedestrian flow while protecting interior calm. Death becomes present without spectacle, structurally acknowledged rather than hidden.
Across these layers, spatial depth increases gradually rather than abruptly. Movement from city to bedside remains continuous. Sovereignty shifts from civic participation to role flexibility to perceptual presence.
Within Reach proposes a new urban hospice model: not an enclave of retreat, but an architecture that resists exile. In an aging society, dignity cannot survive in isolation. It must remain within reach of the social world.