Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partners

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partners

This garden, filled with a maze of grey brick arches interspersed with willow trees, has been completed by Martha Schwartz Partners as part of the 2011 Xi’an International Horticultural Expo currently taking place in China.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 is one of nine gardens designed under the theme ‘the harmonious co-existence of nature and the city’.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

The impression of endless pathways and arches is created by mirrors fixed to the brick walls, which on finding the dark exit corridor are revealed to be one-way glass, allowing a view back to those still lost in the maze.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Over 1,000 small bronze bells hang from the branches of the willow trees, which chime in the breeze.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Photographs 1-3 are by MSP. Photographs 4-11 are by Gen Wang. Photograph 12 is by Jake Walker.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

More stories about the 2011 Xi’an Expo on Dezeen »
More projects by Martha Schwartz Partners on Dezeen »

The following information is from the architects:


Xi’An International Horticulture Exhibition Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6

Xi’An, China

Completion: 2011
Size: 900 sqm

MSP was one of nine international landscape design firms to be invited to design a small garden installation on the theme of “the harmonious co-existence of nature and the city” at the 2011 International Horticulture Exhibition in Xi’An, China. The garden will be seen by up to 12 million people between April and October 2011 and may by left permanently as part of the legacy strategy for long-term development of the site. This project is commissioned by Xi’an International Horticultural Exposition Organizing Committee. The owner’s brief specified that the designer should consider the limitations of local building materials and methods, and that the garden should be accessible to the Chinese point of view. Plot 6 measures about 30 meters square on a flat site.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Materials

The garden is composed mainly of only four elements: traditional grey brick walls and paving, willow trees, mirrors, and bronze bells. The exit corridors are covered with a flat steel and rubber membrane roofing system.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

Concept: An Endless City

The theme of this installation is “City and Nature”. It is a simple theme that allows many interpretations. The bottom half of the garden is made of brick and is a maze of hallways and corridors. The city has a roof of green.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

The “city” is entirely walled by simple, 3 meter high brick walls that seem to have no entrance. One enters the “city” through two ends of an open hallway created by a blank but totally mirrored wall facing a façade of 5 archways. These archways penetrate 1.5 meter thick walls and connected to a series of corridors. The numbers of possible archways to move through increase as one begins to walk through the space, creating a situation where people must begin to choose where to go and what route to try – an endless choice of routes through the maze. At the same time, no one quite knows where they are going and what to expect. It creates an experience of fun, discovery and perhaps some anxiety.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

These thick archways lead to perpendicular hallways, none of which are parallel, resulting in a strange dislocation and signalling that things are not quite normal in this environment. The hallways are all mirrored at their ends creating a doubling of these spaces and corridors that bend and sometimes seem to go into infinity. As one goes through the doorways and hallways, some of them lead to “dead-end” rooms that are completely mirrored spaces and immediately remove you from the bricked environment. If one continues deeper into the maze, you come to a mysterious grove of willows, an illusion created by a 3-sided room with mirrored walls that endlessly reflect the willow grove to create a sense of endless forest.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

As one starts to go down the exit corridors, it is only then that the real surprise of this garden is revealed. The mirrored surfaces are all 1-way mirrors allowing the people in the corridors to watch all the people moving through the maze and in the mirrored rooms. The viewers are able to watch the others perform without the people in the maze knowing. This arrangement provides endless entertainments, quite like the currently popular “reality” TV shows, and allows the viewers a vicarious view to performances and amusement thanks to the people who are performing completely oblivious to the fact that they are being watched. The only thing that is more amusing than looking at ourselves, is watching others when they don’t know they are being watched! The corridors are a “fun-house” where people laugh and photograph the performance in the maze from the sides.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

At each end of the transverse corridors are mirrored walls which create an illusion of infinite space. As one penetrates the last of these corridors, one enters a dark, enclosed exit corridor and is confronted with a wall of one-way mirror facing a mirrored garden room with a grid of willow trees and bright green groundcover that seems to go on forever. Exiting via one of two dark covered corridors, one discovers that many of the mirrors they had encountered on the way through the transverse corridors are actually one-way mirrors, through which they can observe others from the hidden dark corridor.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partner

The combination of living willow and solid grey walls is an expression of the harmonious co-existence of nature and city. The garden is a minimalist work of contemporary land art that speaks to the antiquity and timelessness of China, the flexibility and durability of its culture and people. It is Ying and Yang, light and heavy, dynamic and eternal, masculine and feminine. It is rich by its own simplicity. Everybody can sense it in their own way.

Master Designer’s Garden Plot 6 by Martha Schwartz Partners

Project Team

Principal Design Director: Martha Schwartz
Project Manager: Don Sharp
Project Designers: Liangjun Zhou, Mattia Gambardella, Chris Wong, Tao Jiang
Associated Team: Professor Wang / Atelier DYJG


See also:

.

Square
by Martha Schwartz Partners
Garden
by Groves-Raines Architects
Garden
by West 8

The Guangyun Entrance by Plasma Studio

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

This illuminated, webbed steel structure at the 2011 Xi’an International Horticultural Expo in China is the second project to be featured on Dezeen this week by London architects Plasma Studio.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

The structure is named the The Guangyun Entrance, as it frames the main visitor entrance to the expo site.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

It is anticipated that climbing plants will grow over the trellis frame and create a green roof.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

See all of our stories about the 2011 Xi’an Expo on Dezeen »
More projects by Plasma Studio on Dezeen »

The following details are from the architects:


The Guangyun Entrance

The Guangyun Entrance operates as infrastructure and fulfils the role of bridging the main road that dissects the site. It channels visitors from the plaza at the entrance where they congregate and orient themselves, plotting their direction. Their path over the bridge rises 7m and offers vantage points to gain an overview of the different zones of the Expo displayed ahead.
Bridge design often has two lanes: one for incoming and another for outgoing traffic. However in this case, the flows are uneven and change throughout the day.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

With inspiration taken from rush hour escalator traffic in the London Underground stations, the bridge has been devised with three lanes, so the middle lane can switch direction from incoming in the morning to outgoing later in the day.
 These three bands read as interwoven braids, and together with a surrounding trellis roofed structure, they give the appearance of bands of landscape peeling off and rejoining the mass at the end of the journey. Between the three bands are green areas and a water feature for visitors to stop, rest and enjoy the view.

The Guangyun Entrance by GroundLab

Above, an open trellis steel structure forms the shading device that is intended to become naturally overgrown with climbing plants, thus forming a green roof, and suggests the theme of the Expo to distant onlookers.
The lightweight roof has been developed together with Arup engineers as an innovative integral structure that appears as beams seemingly free-floating in space.

The Guangyun Entrance has been conceived as a landbridge with a tensegrity trellice structure that will gradually become overgrown by greenery.

International Competition: 1. Prize, 2009
Project: 2009-2011
Opening: April 28th 2011
Completion: March 2011
Client: Chan-Ba Ecological District
Architecture: Plasma Studio, BIAD
Landscape Design: GroundLab, LAUR Studio, Beijing Forestry
University 
Engineers: John Martin and Associates, Arup


See also:

.

The Creativity Pavilion
by Plasma Studio
Hotel
by Plasma Studio
Tetris Haus
by Plasma Studio

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

This pavilion by London architects Plasma Studio is located at the heart of the 2011 Xi’an International Horticultural Expo, which is currently taking place in China.

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

The Creativity Pavilion is formed of three angular volumes that cantilever out across the lake, creating a shelter for visitors to walk or sit below.

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

The shape of the building follows the lines of landscape project Flowing Gardens, also designed by Plasma Studio alongside landscape architects Groundlab, which is a series of jolting pathways directed towards the pavilion.

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

More stories about the 2011 Xi’an Expo on Dezeen »
More projects by Plasma Studio on Dezeen »

Here are some more details from the press release:


Opening of Xi’an Expo
 Press Release

The next big event in China after the Beijing Olympics and Shanghai Expo with a projected 12 Mio visitors for the coming 6 months, Xi’an International Horticultural Expo has officially opened.

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

The ancient city of Xi’an- home to the Terracotta Army and many buildings of unique historical significance- is using this opportunity to focus on the current challenges from its recent growth and transformation.
The expo is situated in the Chan-ba Ecological District, a former sandpit where the water was severely degraded in the 1980s. Two decades of work has restored the ecosystem and this expo is able to demonstrate what can be accomplished through the use of the most advanced technology, ideas, and material.
Another challenge that the Expo is starting to address comes from the context of China’s rapid urbanisation process: how to create a sustainable urbanism and provide universal access to open space and nature?

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

The Creativity Pavilion is located on the edge of the lake as the endpoint to the central axis that starts with the Gate Building, and is the starting point for the water crossing by boat. It ties in with a series of piers that follow the landscape jutting out into the water. The built volume is interwoven with the articulating ground, producing continuities on many levels integrating the landscape and building together.

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

From this flows the organization of the building massed as three parallel volumes within the landscape, flowing through and underneath, leading to the piers, the volumes themselves hover as cantilevers over the lake. The fluid experience of passing through the landscape continues inside, where all zones are interconnected through the looping system of ramps.

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio

Through its materiality the building again manifests itself as an extension of the ground with its floors and interior walls made from concrete and bronze is used as expression of local identity.

The Creativity Pavilion by Plasma Studio


See also:

.

Garden of 10,000 Bridges
by West 8
Tetris Haus by
Plasma Studio
Strata Hotel / Königswarte
by Plasma Studio