
Hangzhou Grand Theatre
The roof of Hangzhou Grand Theatre features over 6,000 pure titanium panels, totaling 160 tons. Beyond supporting its complex form, the titanium surfaces shimmer in the changing light, marking a pioneering chapter for architectural titanium applications in China.
National Centre For The Performing Arts (Beijing)
The exterior of Beijing’s National Centre combines over 18,000 titanium panels with ultra-clear glass, covering approximately 36,000 square meters. In daylight, the titanium skin shimmers with a soft, pearl-like sheen; after dark, it seems to hover in light, a balance of strength and elegance made visible.

Tokyo Big Sight
The inverted pyramid conference building of Tokyo Big Sight is clad in 0.6mm and 1.5mm titanium panels, spanning 17,600 square meters and weighing 140 tons. The lightweight, corrosion-resistant titanium enhances longevity while lending the building a strikingly high-tech visual impact.
Senso-Ji Temple
During recent renovations, Senso-ji Temple incorporated titanium alloy tiles on the Hōzōmon Gate, Main Hall, and Five-Story Pagoda, totaling roughly 5,700 square meters and 38 tons of material. These lightweight titanium tiles improve seismic resilience while preserving traditional architectural aesthetics, ensuring historical structures endure safely.
Guggenheim Museum Bilbao
The museum’s exterior is clad in 33,000 titanium panels that shift between silver and golden hues with the changing light, resembling sculptural forms from a dreamlike world. Titanium’s durability and unique reflective properties allow the building to embody both bold design and poetic visual storytelling.

Hotel Marqués de Riscal
Curving titanium ribbons sweep over the hotel roof in shades of pink, gold, and silver, capturing the essence of Rioja through color, texture, and subtle metallic reflections. Titanium not only supports the structure but also conveys brand narrative and regional culture, merging art and function seamlessly.
Baoji Grand Theatre
Along the Weihe River in Baoji, a cultural landmark rises beneath a roof of 26,000 square meters of titanium panels, its surface reflecting light with a warm, natural radiance. The brushed finish creates silk-like textures that glow warmly in the northwestern sun. As the first large-scale public building to use 100% domestically produced titanium, it cuts roof weight by 68% compared with traditional materials, while seismic design ensures lasting stability in high-intensity zones.

Titanium transforms architecture from mere structural support into a medium that tells stories, embodies culture, and conveys brand identity. Lightweight, durable, modern, and poetic, it is becoming an indispensable “hidden champion” in contemporary architectural design.