Yanko Design

5 Best Surreal Bookstores That Make You Forget You’re Inside a Building

A bookstore should do more than sell books. At its best, it alters how you perceive the act of reading, the space around you, and the relationship between the two. The five bookstores in this list abandon conventional retail interiors entirely. They borrow from astronomy, geology, wetland ecology, and mountain landscapes to create spaces where the architecture becomes as absorbing as anything on the shelves. These are rooms that make you forget walls exist.

What connects them is a shared refusal to treat books as products needing display. Instead, each project treats the book as a spatial protagonist, something that informs the shape of ceilings, the curve of shelves, and the way light enters a room. From a portal to deep space in Jiangsu to a mountaintop perch above a river canyon, these bookstores prove that the most effective retail design does not sell to visitors. It transports them.

1. X+Living Bookstore

Located in Jiangsu Province and completed in 2023, this bookstore by Li Xiang of X+Living studio is the furthest thing from a cozy reading nook. The space is built around massive three-dimensional structures that resemble astronomical instruments, concentric rings, and geometric forms inspired by celestial mechanics, reimagined as bookshelves and display zones. Books sit on these structures in positions that seem to defy gravity, creating the sensation of browsing a library adrift somewhere in deep space. The project won the 2025 Platinum A’ Design Award in Interior Space and Exhibition Design, which signals how far the concept pushes beyond conventional bookstore interiors.

The spatial ambition is the story here. Most bookstore designers work with shelving grids and lighting schemes. X+Living built a set piece. The concentric ring structures occupy the room not as furniture but as architecture within architecture, turning navigation into an experience of orbiting through layers of books arranged on curving, tilted surfaces. The scale of the installation relative to the room makes it impossible to separate the act of browsing from the act of inhabiting the space. Visitors are not walking through a store. They are moving through a constructed universe that happens to contain books.

What we like

What we dislike

2. Toyou Bookstore

Wutopia Lab designed Toyou bookstore inside a red-brick building by Jean Nouvel in Shanghai’s Huangpu district, using traditional Chinese garden techniques as spatial logic rather than decoration. The interior is organized around two abstract mountains, “Big You” and “Little You,” which form interlocking cave-like spaces out of burgundy perforated aluminum panels and white artificial stone. The “Little You” mountain greets visitors at the entrance as a glowing white bookshelf, while the larger “Big You” mountain houses the main reading and living areas behind layers of bookshelves that create new views at every turn.

The garden-design principle at work here is “a view at every step,” and the architects execute it with the kind of precision that makes each transition between spaces feel composed rather than accidental. A circular “secret place” sits between the two mountains as a private reading zone, while hidden metaphors (a well, a dripping spring) reference classical Chinese poetry. Lead architect Yu Ting has described the bookstore as a tool for understanding Shanghai itself, a miniature cultural complex that accepts readers and non-readers alike. The result is a space that feels ancient and contemporary at once, where cave walls are made of perforated aluminum and mountain peaks are bookshelves.

What we like

What we dislike

3. Xixi Goldmye Bookstore

What started as a forgotten 20-year-old office building in Hangzhou’s wetlands is now one of the most compelling adaptive-reuse bookstores in China. Atelier Wen’Arch stripped the structure to its bare concrete columns, dismantled the existing roof and wall systems completely, and rebuilt an 880-square-meter space that opens generously to the surrounding Xixi National Wetland Park. The U-shaped building, once closed off and disconnected from its natural setting, was completed in April 2025 as a structure that treats the wetland landscape as its primary interior surface.

The defining feature is a system of laminated pine timber “book beams” that intersect with the original concrete columns and extend outward in measured cantilevers. These double-beam elements integrate lighting and air conditioning return channels between each timber pair, turning mechanical infrastructure into an architectural rhythm that runs through the entire interior. The beams frame views of the wetland, so the surrounding nature becomes a living artwork visible from every reading position. The structural intervention aligns with the original building grid while introducing warmth and human scale to what was once sterile office space. It is renovation as reinterpretation, where the old bones inform a new spatial logic.

What we like

What we dislike

4. Xinglong Lake Citic Bookstore

MUDA Architects designed this waterfront bookstore around a single image: a book falling from the sky. The rectangular structure sits at the edge of Xinglong Lake in south Chengdu, and its swooping roof extends for 3 meters with both ends elevated at different heights (16 meters at the southwest, 7.5 meters at the northeast). The curve mimics a nearby grass slope, creating a continuous visual line between the built form and the landscape. Massive windows extend below the waterline, merging the reading interior with the surface of the lake.

The roof is the architectural argument. Its curved surface reinterprets the pitched roof of traditional Chengdu vernacular architecture while functioning as a structural analog for the pages of an open book. The asymmetric elevation creates interior volumes that shift dramatically from one end to the other, high and cathedral-like at the southwest, compressed and intimate at the northeast. That gradient gives each section of the bookstore a different spatial character without partition walls. The underwater windows are the most disorienting detail: readers seated near the water level see the lake from inside it rather than above, which dissolves the expected boundary between interior and landscape in a way that no amount of floor-to-ceiling glazing can replicate.

What we like

What we dislike

5. Nujiang Grand Canyon Bookstore

Perched on top of the Gaoligong Mountains in Yangpo Village, the Nujiang Grand Canyon Bookstore is built to feel like it belongs to the terrain rather than sitting on it. The structure extends outward from the mountainside like a sharp arrow, a form that references the Lisu people’s historical connection to crossbows. Reinforced concrete and locally sourced materials anchor the building to the slope while keeping its environmental impact low, and wall openings frame specific views of the Nujiang River and surrounding peaks.

The architectural intelligence is in how the building negotiates the slope. Rather than flattening the site or building a conventional foundation, the structure adapts its footprint to the mountain’s gradient, creating a subtle sense of elevation that rises with the terrain. The framed canyon views through the wall openings function as curated compositions rather than generic panoramas, each one selecting a specific relationship between river, peak, and sky. The combination of contemporary concrete construction and local material traditions creates an object that reads as both modern and rooted, a building that could not exist anywhere else. For a bookstore, that site-specificity is the rarest quality of all: a space where the location is not a backdrop but the reason the architecture exists.

What we like

What we dislike

When The Room Is The Story

These five bookstores share one conviction: that the space around a book matters as much as the words inside it. A celestial instrument in Jiangsu, a pair of abstract mountains in Shanghai, timber beams framing a wetland in Hangzhou, a roof shaped like a falling book in Chengdu, and an arrow launched from a mountaintop above the Nujiang River. None of these projects treats architecture as a container. Each one treats it as content.

The best bookstores have always understood that reading is a spatial act. Where the body sits, what the eyes see between paragraphs, how light changes across an afternoon, these conditions shape the experience of a book as much as the typography on the page. These five take that understanding and build entire worlds around it. Walk into any of them, and the building becomes the first chapter.

Exit mobile version