Royal College of Art
Specialisms: Material Innovation / Architecture /
Location: Chengdu, China
First Name: Qiyue
Last Name: Dong
Specialisms: Material Innovation / Architecture
Sectors:
My Location: Chengdu, China
University / College: Royal College of Art
Course / Program Title: Design practice
Qiyue Dong is a spatial designer and artist from Chengdu, China, whose practice probes the evolving relationship between people and the spaces they inhabit. She believes that the health and safety of our built environments will be central to the future of architecture, shaping how cities respond to social and environmental challenges.
Educated at the Royal College of Art, Qiyue is currently pioneering research into photocatalytic ceramics—a new generation of facade materials capable of both breaking down airborne pollutants and visually recording their presence. By enabling building exteriors to act as real-time diagnostic surfaces for air quality, her work reimagines the architectural skin as an active environmental sensor and storyteller.Her creative process bridges spatial innovation, sustainable material development, and socially engaged design. Through illustration and photography, she examines how human activity leaves subtle yet enduring traces on materials and landscapes. At the core of her research lies an inquiry into how social reproduction intersects with the built environment, aiming to integrate sustainable materials, emerging technologies, and inclusive strategies to create healthier, more equitable futures.
This project reimagines the building facade as a living skin, using nine type of plant-based photocatalytic ceramic panels to both combat and reveal urban air pollution. Installed in nine of London’s most polluted neighborhoods, the panels gradually fade under sunlight, with the degree of fading serving as a visible indicator of air quality. Dust and pollutants become both warning and record. By transforming architecture into an active environmental sensor, the work merges poetic aesthetics with urgent climate realities, advocating for material sustainability and environmental justice in the urban realm.