













A first-floor lobby waiting
to be reinterpreted
How can “vitality” be expressed
without using new resources?
Through the prudence
of Farglory employees,
the imagination of designers,
and the persistence of
construction crews,
the process was
one of conflict and compromise.
After the clash,
they decided to flip the wall tiles,
letting the raw texture
of the materials
open up
infinite possibilities.
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Object location1F
Collaborative Production Team
mosaic artist Tsou Hsiao-wei

Material source:
Granite removed from stairwells, recycled marble and granite, reclaimed wood, recycled glass, regenerated boards, recycled copper sheets.
Material features:
Previously used as flooring or wall finishes in stairwells and public spaces, some of these materials were leftover waste from past renovations.
As part of a project themed around “vitality” and “sustainability,” with art embodying the imagery of mountains, forests, and light, artist Tsou Hsiao-wei’s Mountain was made by reassembling existing stone materials (flipped to expose their reverse side) and various recycled materials into a landscape mural symbolizing a mountain. Recycled glass suggests the shifting light and shadows of mountain streams, while reclaimed wood and copper sheets evoke trees and fleeting glimpses of birds in flight. The overall work resembles a silent journey through nature, infusing forest scenery into the interior of urban architecture.

#ConstructionWasteUpcyclingProject4.0
#WasteFromRenovationOfFargloryHeadquarters
