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In the heart of Beijing, where tradition and transformation coexist, MULI’s new showroom slips into the city’s rhythm with quiet confidence. Designed by Yabu Pushelberg, the project unfolds inside the restored Qing Temple, a blend of historic architecture and contemporary reinvention. But this isn’t a showroom in the conventional sense. It’s a space that lives like a home, moves like a gallery, and holds presence like a poem. The experience is fluid, residential in tone and conceptual in structure. Every threshold leads somewhere new. Every material holds purpose. Rooms aren’t arranged by category but by emotion, light, and rhythm. The feeling shifts from ethereal to immersive, curated in a way that invites visitors to feel rather than just observe. As Lao She once wrote: “我所爱的北平不是枝枝节节的一些什么,而是整个儿与我的心灵相黏合的一段历史,一大块地方,多少风景名胜,从雨后什刹海的蜻蜓一直到我梦里的玉泉山的塔影,都积凑到一块,每一小的事件中有个我,我的每一思念中有个北平。” “The Beijing I love is not about intricacies. The entire stretch of history of the city resonates with my soul. Numerous scenic spots converge in this vast expanse, from the dragonflies over Shichahai after the rain to the pagoda’s shadow on Yuquanshan in my dreams. Everything gathers into one. In every small event, there is a part of me, and in every longing thought, there is a piece of Beijing.” That spirit is embedded in every square meter. The Muli showroom doesn’t showcase product; it expresses a philosophy. It’s built on emotional clarity, cultural memory, and architectural rhythm. It offers a new kind of experience—one that doesn’t separate function from feeling or tradition from innovation. Everything connects. Everything belongs. This video was produced in collaboration with Designwire and MULI, featuring Glenn Pushelberg.