Thursday, October 27, 2016

Module Four - The Representation of Space



Tianjin Cultural Park, Tianjin China

Tianjin Cultural Park in Tianjin China is an exceptional example of successful public design. This summer I was fortunate enough to be able to visit myself, and experience firsthand the space as I travelled through it. Completed in 2012, This park was designed by Atelier Dreiseitl, who has since joined the Ramboll Group. A variety of buildings immediately surrounding the park, including the theater house looking over the entire park, as well as a Public Library and Museum and Culture Center. The creators were striving to create a social place that appeals to and serves as a comfortable space for all users, old and young alike. As you walk through the site, there are several outdoor amphitheater like seating areas, as well as large open squares which are used for all events like popular exercises like rollerblading and aerobic like dancing lines. Not only does the site serve as a social circulation space, the large pond in the middle helps manage storm water runoff. Exploring the site, you can definitely see how the different spaces are used, and the successes that thee designers had in achieving their goal.


The designers attack storytelling by approaching the design with several key points in storytelling. They clearly had an end goal in mind, to create a space that serves for social interaction as well as circulation. They knew the audience they were aiming for, and they used a variety of beautiful visuals to help create a more lasting image. Knowing the crowd that they were aiming for helped them decide how to manipulate the space to help cater to the needs of the users, giving them the spaces like the open squares and amphitheater seating. Lastly, to create an image in everybody’s mind, they included a few massive visuals that act as landmarks for the space. These landmarks include the large runoff pond that the park is designed around, or the massive light tower that looks over the entire space.
Rollerblading and traditional dances are popular throughout the site

A Museum/Cultural Center, Library, and Theater House all surround the park

Zhangjiagang Town River
           
            Located in Suzhou, China, the reconstruction of Zhangjiagang Town River has brought a drastic change to the surrounding area. Before reconstruction, the river easily became extremely polluted, allowing for little to no access or use of the river by locals, and because of this, the river was looked to be in the way, instead of a source of life for the city. Along with this, the streets and sidewalks were congested and difficult to navigate. Designed by Botao Landscape, this space was designed with intentions to make the river useable, as well as make the surrounding space an enjoyable park for the users. To make the space comfortable, the designer tried to preserve local Jiyang culture in the design by including native plants, soft line work often found in traditional design, and a mix of popular materials found in the area. The new plan organized pedestrian circulation through the space, as well as a new layout for the streets immediate to the space, which helped clear up traffic also. The last issue that Batao was faced with, and possibly, the most important, was finding a way to clean the water, making it accessible to the locals. To do so, they designed a way to reroute some of the rain and sewage runoff, as well as creating a dredging system for the river. This space utilizes a variety of techniques and attractions to make the space as comfortable as it is functional. Throughout the site, one can find small retail spaces, several pavilions, and even old restored bridges that help keep the culture alive.
Aerial view of the renovated site

            Batao Landscape was faced with the challenge to clean up the river and help organize the city surrounding it, but in a way that doubles as a comfortable urban space. To do so, they used several of the main characteristics in storytelling. First, they started out having a clear intention already in their mind to clean up and organize the river and roads. Considering they wanted to do this in a very subtle way, they decided the potential users, and how to cater to their desires. With the future users being mainly the locals in the area, they wanted to keep as much of the culture as they could to make the space as comfortable as possible. They knew the audience, and to help improve the site, they combined this knowledge with the desire for landmarks, to help create some of the main features of the park. To keep the culture, they used popular materials found throughout the area to construct a large portion of this renovation. In addition to this, they restored many of the existing bridges, instead of replacing them entirely which helps the culture remain. The culture itself could be considered a landmark of the area, as it creates a much larger impact for the users of the site, and in turn makes the experience much more memorable. By having a clear intention, knowing the users, and incorporating landmarks, Batao successful renovated the area, creating a functional and comfortable space for all.


Transformation from concept to master plan


View over the river

Pavilion constructed in renovation that looks over the river

Kaukari Park, Chile

          Kaukari Park in Chile is a renovation project that serves to give a new image to the Copiapo River that runs through Copiapo, Chile. The main goal of this project is to create a scenic space that can be utilized by locals, helping them access the river. In addition to this, they wanted to help reduce pollution and create a space that can be widely used by all types of social groups. Completed in 2014 by the architects at Teodoro Fernandez Arquitectos, this project has accomplished exactly that. Including a variety of green spaces, pavilions and gathering spaces, this park has given a new face to the river and how the users view it. The open public spaces serve as an area that the public can use for exercise, social gatherings, as well as just simple circulation. In an effort to maintain the local culture, the architects decided to use a list of materials that are popular and common in the area, that also tie into the city’s past.
A pavilion found in Kaukari Park


            Kaukari Park is similar to the other two precedents presented here, in the fact that this too had a clear starting goal, as well as attempts to use visuals to help make a lasting impact. Although they have an idea of their users, this is not as strong of a case as presented in the other two. The clear first goal, was to turn an unused space into a comfortable urban space to serve as a gathering and circulation space, as well as give the public access to the previously polluted river. As the design progressed, they found a way to make the space both enjoyable as well as functional. The visuals of the park come from both the integration of native plants for green space, as well the ties to the culture, using common building materials found in the area, and tying back to the traditions of the area by giving the users spaces to exercise a variety of traditions.


Looking over the Copiapo River


Site map of Kaukari Park

Section looking through park

Aerial view of Kaukari Park

              All three examples show both good and not so good examples of design and storytelling. They all do their best to appeal to the users, they all act as a social gathering point for the cities they're located in, and they all serve a very logical, functional purpose on top of this. Whether it be storm water management or serving for water pollution reduction, these spaces help benefit the local area in a subtle way, by creating an enjoyable space to hide the functional purposes. The design intent of each example was clearly defined before construction began, which helped them produce the best possible space they could.



5 comments:

  1. How about the discussion about techniques and methods of spatial representations and communications?

    ReplyDelete
  2. I enjoyed your firsthand account of Tianjin Park and how the space is used. I found it interesting how the park not only serves as a social gathering point, but also how it serves a practical issue of managing storm water run off. The River Renovation project's use of local materials worked well to represent the culture as well as served a practical purpose of improving the foundation of the site. The images you included were stunning and did a great job of illustrating what you talked about. Thanks for sharing these examples of urban design!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I liked the examples you used from china within your module and how you talked about the way you experienced the space when visiting them while in china. This gave me a different view of the space from someone i know compared to an article i would read on the internet. The pictures included along with it also helped me understand the space better as well.

    ReplyDelete
  4. I really like the three options you picked. They all show how you can take a different approach to making a dead space a thriving urban development that people want to encounter it on a day to day basis. After being in China this summer we got to see how urban developments are really starting to become a huge aspect in cities today and that it is almost essential to making city life successful. Sometimes it's is hard for us to grasp that when we live in a small farming town in northern Idaho.

    ReplyDelete
  5. The three examples of representations of space that you provided were very interesting to me. It is good that you are able to recognize elements of design that are successful and not successful at representation and storytelling. I advise you to continue to find great representations of space so that you can use them as precedents in your own designs. Strive to utilize elements that appeal and make connections with the users.

    ReplyDelete