C-Mine by 51N4E

C-Mine by 51N4E

Brussels firm 51N4E have converted the industrial buildings at this former coal mine in Winterslag, Belgium, into a cultural centre.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Called C-Mine, the project involved building two new structures to house theatres either side of the main machinery hall.

C-Mine by 51N4E

The new buildings have a white concrete base and steel shutters so the auditoria inside can either be flooded with natural light or darkened for performances.

C-Mine by 51N4E

The project also houses a design centre, music room, restaurant, event hall, exhibitions spaces and tourist facilities for the old mining site.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Photographs are by Stijn Bollaert, courtesy 51N4E.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Here are some more details from the architects:


C-MINE: cultural infrastructure reconversion

This project consists of the reconversion of the listed machinery buildings on the former coal mine site of Winterslag. The complex will house up to 5.000 m2 of cultural infrastructure. In the remaining and restored part of the building a design centre, a restaurant, a festivity hall and a touristic infrastructure for the experience of the mining history.

C-Mine by 51N4E

In the arm pits of the old T-shaped building a new theatre hall, a smaller music room, several exhibition spaces and facility functions (a.o. offices) are developed. The new part integrates perfectly into the functional and formal logic of the existing complex.

C-Mine by 51N4E

The former nerve centre of the coal mine of Winterslag is being transformed into the new heart of C-MINE. The former compressor hall, the lift buildings and the ‘Barenzaal’ are reprogrammed and developed into a cultural centre, a design centre and a tourist visitors centre.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Restoration: The existing buildings form brick envelopes housing the different machines. Already through their scale and their engineering they enforce respect. By opting for a light restoration they buildings will remain intact, as privileged witnesses from the mining age.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Extension: The industrial buildings present themselves as a monolith. Functionally they consist of a five meters high labyrinthine foundation base with on top a few majestical machine halls. This contrast between light and dark, high and low, spacious and covered up forms the biggest quality of these buildings. The extension is a resolute option to enhance this contrast and maintain it. The existing base is extended on to the whole available construction site. The new base in white concrete smoothly accommodates all new functions. Only the two new venue hall will pierce trough the base with their volume.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Cultural machines: The two new theatre venues are considered as cultural machines. Together with the lift buildings and the compressor hall they construct a new complex of machine halls on a big ‘piano nobile’. In between these cultural and industrial machine hall unique terrace arise, paved with the same red and white tiles as the existing interior floors of the machine halls.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Like the machine halls the two theatre venues bathe in daylight and are equipped with steal blades for regulatable sun shading and darkening. The big venue (500 spectators) is equipped with a fixed slope while the small venue has a flat ground floor surface.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Program: The new complex has its main entrance on to the urban square in front. A big steal volume filters the public from this square into the foyer. Once inside one finds the tourist visitor centre.

C-Mine by 51N4E

The foyer will function as huge distribution centre form which provides access to the other functions such as an exhibition space, the café and restaurant, the big and small venue, etc.

C-Mine by 51N4E

On top of this foyer the compressor hall is located which can function as an expansion tank for the design centre, the cultural centre, as well as for third parties.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Form the compressor hall on the visitor can access the Mine Experience, the design centre, the café and restaurant and the new roof terraces – accompanied with a unique view on the slagheap.

C-Mine by 51N4E

Click above for larger image

C-Mine by 51N4E

Click above for larger image

C-Mine by 51N4E

Click above for larger image

Location: Winterslag, Genk, BE
Invited competition: 2005
Completion: 2010
Client: City of Genk
51N4E tasks: full process
Project team: Johan Anrys, Freek Persyn, Peter Swinnen, Aglaia De Mulder, Kelly Hendriks, Chris Blackbee, Joost Körver, Lu Zhang, Tine Cooreman, Aline Neirynck, Tom Baelus, Sotiria Kornaropoulou, Bob De Wispelaere, Jan Das, Philippe Nathan.
Consultants: TTAS (theater techniques), Bureau Monumentenzorg (heritage), Arat/ Philip Baelus (restoration)
Structural engineer: BAS/ Dirk Jaspaert
Technical engineer: IRS
Building physics/acoustics: Daidalos-Peutz
Calculation: Probam
Construction: Houben
Programme: theater & concert hall, Tourist Centre, Design Museum
Site surface: 8.800 m2
Built surface: 15.000 m2
Construction cost (excl VAT): 30.000.000 €


See also:

.

Horno 3
by Grimshaw
Red Diamond by
Chiasmus Partners
Between the Waters by
Ooze and Marjetica Potrc

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

The New World Symphony’s orchestral academy designed by Frank Gehry opened yesterday in Miami Beach, Florida.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Called New World Centre, the building includes a 756-seat performance hall surrounded by ‘sails’ that reflect sound and act as projection screens.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

The 80 foot-high glass curtain wall displays activity within to the surrounding neighbourhood and is designed to invite passers-by to enter the main atrium, where tumbling forms enclose the building’s smaller rooms.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

The facade features a 7,000 square-foot projection wall onto which live concerts can be projected and enjoyed by visitors in the adjacent 2.5-acre Miami Beach SoundScape landscaped park, designed by Dutch firm West 8.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

More about Frank Gehry on Dezeen »

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Photographs are by Claudia Uribe unless otherwise stated. Drawings are courtesy of New World Symphony.

The information below is from the New World Symphony:


GRAND OPENING OF NEW WORLD CENTER IN MIAMI BEACH

New civic and cultural landmark, designed by Frank Gehry in close collaboration with Michael Tilson Thomas, is the first purpose-built home for New World Symphony

New World Symphony, America’s Orchestral Academy, marks a new era for classical music with the inauguration of the institution’s first purpose-built home, an extraordinary new facility in the center of Miami Beach. Designed by Frank Gehry in close collaboration with the New World Symphony’s founder and artistic director Michael Tilson Thomas, New World Center opens up exciting new possibilities in the way music is taught, presented and experienced and dramatically advances New World Symphony’s mission to provide exceptional professional training for the gifted young music school graduates who are its Fellows.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

“The opening of this extraordinary building is the beginning of a wonderful adventure and exploration,” said Michael Tilson Thomas. ”Not only are we marking a new era for this organization and giving our musicians an unrivalled facility in which to learn and achieve their potential, but we are also inviting everyone to experience classical music in a new kind of space—one that is designed to engage and to energize, and that will move people from around the world to think about music in new ways.”

At the heart of New World Center is a flexible and technologically sophisticated 756-seat performance hall, featuring large acoustically reflective “sails” that surround the audience with sound and also serve as video projection surfaces.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Above image is by Todd Eberle. New World Symphony founder Michael Tilson Thomas in New World Center Atrium

Directly adjacent to the 100,641-square-foot building is the new Miami Beach SoundScape, a landscaped 2.5- acre public space into which New World Symphony will extend its programming. Together, the building and the public space create a dynamic new city center and a geographical “heart” from which civic, cultural, recreational, tourist and leisurely activity will radiate.

Six days of opening festivities will showcase the new building’s remarkable capabilities. Events include the world premiere of a commissioned work for orchestra by acclaimed composer Thomas Adès; video projections within the performance hall, including a new work by filmmaker Tal Rosner and the world premiere of a series of animations developed in collaboration with the University of Southern California (alma mater of Michael Tilson Thomas and Frank Gehry) and its School of Cinematic Arts; outdoor video projections of a new work by Tal Rosner and digital artist C.E.B. Reas; an outdoor wallcast of a live concert; the introduction of new concert formats designed to engage and broaden audiences; an architecture symposium; live outdoor entertainment; and fireworks.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Above image is by Tomas Loewy. New World Symphony founder Michael Tilson Thomas in New World Center Atrium

Frank Gehry stated, “I am very proud of this building, which results from a close working relationship with my lifelong friend Michael Tilson Thomas and brings to life his dream for New World Symphony and the entire world of classical music. I hope the spirit of creative engagement that Michael and I have enjoyed will live on in the building’s spaces. They are designed to encourage young musicians, their mentors and their audiences to try new things, interact in new ways and remain open to new experiences.”

According to Howard Herring, President and CEO of New World Symphony, “What we have with the opening of New World Center is a set of unprecedented opportunities. Opportunities for the best young orchestral musicians in the world, our Fellows, to learn to surpass themselves. Opportunities for the public, inside and outside this building, to become engaged in the Fellows’ journey, and feel their thrill of discovery. Opportunities to reinvent, and reimagine, the way classical music is taught, performed, programmed and experienced. From the infinitely varied projections on the outside of this building to the dazzling array of configurations and visual experiences you see inside this performance hall to our amazingly flexible and advanced spaces for teaching and rehearsal and media, everything at New World Center is designed to open fresh possibilities, and to keep opening them, not just today but every day.”

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Major components of New World Center’s program-focused design are: a soaring, 80-foot-high glass facade providing a spectacular entrance and views of activities inside a skylit atrium where playful, tumbling geometric forms delineate the internal spaces, and where the public may relax at an illuminated glass bar with a blue titanium canopy; the 756-seat performance hall, with acoustic design led by Yasuhisa Toyota of Nagata Acoustics; a giant, 7,000-square-foot exterior projection wall for outdoor video presentations, including wallcastsTM of live concerts; a rooftop terrace offering panoramic views of Miami Beach, the Atlantic Ocean and Biscayne Bay; a music library; and numerous practice and rehearsal spaces and technology studios wired with 17 miles of fiber-optic cable for high-speed Internet2 transmissions.

Miami Beach SoundScape, commissioned by the City of Miami Beach and designed by the acclaimed Dutch firm West 8, is located to the east of New World Center. To the west of the new building lies Pennsylvania Avenue Garage, a new 550-car parking structure designed by Gehry Partners, LLP. These facilities, combined with the building, comprise the City Center redevelopment project that is injecting fresh vitality into the architecturally historic district of South Beach.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Above image is by Todd Eberle

About New World Center

The New World Center is a unique performance, education, production and creative space with state-of-the-art capabilities, owned and operated by the New World Symphony. A global hub for creative expression and collaboration and a laboratory for the ways music is taught, presented and experienced, the new building will enable the New World Symphony to continue its role as the leader in integrating technology with music education and concert presentation. It will be used by the New World Symphony for educational activities, musical and related cultural performances and events, rehearsals, Internet2 transmissions, recordings, broadcasts and webcasts. The venue will also be available for third-party uses on a rental basis.

Dedicated to classical music’s power to communicate and connect, the New World Center is at once exceptionally transparent and outgoing. The 7,000-square-foot projection wall located on the right side of the façade brings what happens inside the concert hall to the event space outside. The main viewing area, ExoStage@Miami Beach SoundScape, can accommodate up to 1,000 people and is surrounded by an immersive sound system designed to look like two giant, gently curving ballet barres, providing a first-rate listening experience to audiences. In addition to offering wallcastsTM of concerts, the projection wall will show presentations including the site-specific video mural, video art, films and informational shorts.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

The main entrance of New World Center is set in a soaring, 80-foot-high glass curtain wall to the left of the projection wall, providing uninterrupted views of the skylit main atrium and the dramatic, tumbling forms delineating the interior spaces beyond. The entrance is distinguished by a white, wave-like canopy and opens out onto the Mary and Howard Frank Plaza and Miami Beach SoundScape. Built with glass with no iron content, the curtain wall is utterly clear and disappears when lit from within— by the atrium’s skylight during the day and by theatrical lighting at night. When lit at night by the space’s architectural lighting system, the tumbling forms within the frame of the curtain wall take on the character of performers on a proscenium stage, turning the building itself into a performance. A 650-square-foot LED light field is positioned at the top of the transparent wall, announcing its programming, and the campus’s box office is located next to the main entrance.

The atrium immediately conveys the feeling that New World Center is a place to be used and enjoyed. The floors are polished concrete, the walls are painted drywall, and the seating consists of baby-blue banquettes with plywood backing. A large, illuminated glass bar with an undulating, blue-tinted titanium canopy is situated at the back of lively, light-flooded space. The atrium also features Taboehan (2003), a monumental sculpture by artist Frank Stella. Donated by Miami collector Martin Z. Margulies, Taboehan is the only work of art permanently on view at New World Center.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Above image is by Tomas Loewy

Among the principal spaces that open onto the atrium is the SunTrust Pavilion: a large, multi-purpose room for full-orchestra rehearsals, small performances, film screenings, lectures, business meetings and recordings, many of which will be free and open to the public. The east wall of the pavilion is glass, allowing passersby to see the activity inside and be encouraged to enter the building. An upper terrace permits people to observe the activities in the Pavilion without disrupting them, while offering an expansive view over Miami Beach SoundScape.

To reach the performance hall through the atrium, concertgoers pass through one of two softly lit, serpentine corridors that gradually narrow as they wind along, before opening again dramatically to reveal the hall. Visitors arrive into the space by the front of the stage, in the center of the 50-foot-high, circular hall where tiers of seats rise on all sides. From the first moment in the hall, the design makes people participants rather than spectators—and once the audience members take their places, they remain involved, since no one in this intimate, 756-seat hall is more than 13 rows from the stage.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

The collaboration of Gehry Partners with Nagata Acoustics and Theatre Projects Consultants has resulted in a performance hall that is virtually unlimited in the experiences it can offer. The stage is comprised of ten platforms, each on its own mechanical lift, with fourteen distinctive configurations for all kinds of performance experiences, from a solo recital with cabaret seating to a full-orchestra concert. It is also possible to lower all of the platforms, retract 247 of the seats and turn the central space into a dance floor for the New World Symphony’s series of Pulse concerts. Four built-in platforms set throughout the hall serve as satellite stages, allowing the focus of a concert to shift from the main stage to another part of the room instantaneously, with only a lighting change. Large, curved acoustical “sails” on all sides of the hall double as screens for 14 high definition projectors, allowing New World Symphony to immerse audiences in a visual experience during a concert, or simply show brief program information on a single screen above the stage.

Natural light in the performance hall is afforded via an overhead skylight and a large panoramic window behind the stage, overlooking 17th Street. The hall’s seats are upholstered in mottled patterns of blues and white – specially designed by Frank Gehry and produced by Poltrona Frau – which are inspired by the building’s tropical location and intended to bring imagery of the water and sky of Miami Beach into the performance hall.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

As a facility dedicated to music education, New World Center contains twenty-four individual practice rooms and four ensemble rehearsal rooms where individuals or groups can choose to work either within or away from public view. The technological infrastructure and architectural design also establish links between the activities in these areas and the building’s other public functions. The Knight New Media Center on the building’s third floor contains video and audio editing suites, where New World Symphony can capture, produce and then distribute the audio and visual recordings of concerts, master classes, conversations with guest artists and more. Some of this material will come from the performance hall, which has ten built-in high-definition robotic cameras that can record 360 degrees of concerts and events. Other material will come from the practice rooms and ensemble rooms—two of which are located near the Knight New Media Center on the third floor, wrapped within a structure called The Flower, which is visible throughout the atrium and beyond the curtain wall of the façade. A total of 17 miles of high-speed fiber optic cable runs through the building, allowing every space to be connected to a global audience through next-generation Internet2.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Click above for larger image

Capping the architectural design are the public and program spaces on the sixth floor: notably the music library (which will be frequented by the Fellows), the Patrons’ Lounge and the rooftop terrace with panoramic views of Miami Beach, the Atlantic Ocean and Biscayne Bay. The latter space will be used not only by the Fellows and staff of New World Symphony but by patrons and concert ticket-buyers.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Click above for larger image

About New World Symphony

The New World Symphony, America’s Orchestral Academy (NWS), is dedicated to the artistic, professional and personal development of outstanding young musicians. Founded in 1987 by Michael Tilson Thomas and Ted Arison, its fellowship program provides top graduates of music programs in the United States the opportunity to enhance their music education with the finest professional training. The New World Symphony’s success may be measured in part by its hundreds of alumni who are active in the music profession worldwide in nearly all of America’s major orchestras, and in symphonies and chamber orchestras in Europe, South America and the Far East.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Click above for larger image

As a result of its unique educational environment, the New World Symphony has achieved an international reputation for creating new models of orchestral training and performance. NWS has built a global community of the world’s finest performers, educators and composers who impart their knowledge and insight to the Fellows both in Miami Beach and via Internet2. In addition to presenting a full season of concerts from October to May in Miami Beach and Miami, the New World Symphony has performed in prestigious venues throughout the world, including New York’s Carnegie Hall and Avery Fisher Hall, London’s The Barbican, Paris’ Bastille Opera, Cité de la Musique and Opéra Comique, Amsterdam’s Concertgebouw, Vienna’s Konzerthaus and Rome’s National Academy of Santa Cecilia. The New World Symphony’s eight recordings to date encompass a range of repertoire, from jazz-inspired works to Latin American classics to music by contemporary American composers.

New World Centre by Frank Gehry

Click above for larger image


See also:

.

Dr Chau Chak Wing Building
by Frank Gehry
Lou Ruvo Center
by Frank Gehry
Duplex by Frank Gehry
for Make it Right

Médiathèque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon & Associés

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

This multimedia library in Anzin, France, by Strasbourg architects Dominique Coulon & Associés is wrapped in overlapping slices of concrete.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Reading rooms at the Médiathèque d’Anzin are revealed to the town outside through exposed areas of glazing, while the triangular geometry continues inside.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

More libraries on Dezeen »

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

More architecture on Dezeen »

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Here’s a little text from the architects:


The building reveals its preciousness at first sight.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Its pure, sophisticated geometry situates it as a public building.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The deliberate areas of transparency reveal its content.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The reading rooms present the building to the town in the manner of an invitation.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The multimedia library is covered with large white veils that reflect the light.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The building asserts it lightness, like an origami.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The successive folds and flaps repeat this image.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

It is white, almost immaterial, like the mere projection of a concept, yet it is brimming with the life that constitutes it beyond its physical limits.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

On the inside, there is abundant, uniform light.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The space is open and fluid, offering optimal flexibility.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The lighting effect produced by the tall gaps that appear to float in space is truly beautiful.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

The volumes are independent and geometrically free, giving the whole a wonderfully poetic feel.

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Click for larger image

Mediatheque d’Anzin by Dominique Coulon and Associes

Click for larger image


See also:

.

Library in Münster
by Zauberscho[e]n
Library for Birmingham
by Mecanoo
Library in Colombia by
Javeriana University students

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

Photographer Nelson Garrido has sent us his photographs of a visitors’ centre by Paulo Gomes that’s nestled into the rock face at an archaeological site in Murça, Portugal.

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

The back wall of the interior is formed by the rock itself, while a glazed facade affords views down the hill.

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

The concrete structure houses an information point, reception, cafe and toilets, plus a display of objects excavated from the site.

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

The text that follows is from the architect:


This building project works for the infrastructure to support the archaeological site of Crasto Lofts, consists of building for the reception and interpretation center, parking, paths to visit the site and outdoor equipment and safety signage route.

The archaeological site is located on a hill with 590m elevation on the ridge, southeast of the village of Haystacks, and the area of the “hot land” of the county Murça.

In September 1995 held the first archaeological work to support IPPAR, the National Board for Scientific Research and Technology and the Municipality of Murça – City Hall.

The draft recovery of archaeological study and dissemination of archaeological site was the construction of a building for the reception of visitors and interpretation of the site, defining the routes of access, signage and support equipment and a car park.

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

Location of archaeological and occupation process

The Castro Lofts is situated in the parish of Haystacks, county Murça and occupies the summit of an imposing quartzite massif located between the villages of Haystacks, and Monfebres Varges. The perspective view of the sunset, we can retain from the cold land of the county, shows a lot of sharp ridge as a gray crystal. Incorporates an archaeological area exceeding 2.5 hectares in area bounded by a stone embankment.

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

The Crasto was occupied during the following periods:

1 – In the Chalcolithic from the beginning to the end of March. Rd millennium, the structures are implanted a constructive upper deck (sort of “Acropolis”), between 575m and 590m in elevation, much-upright, sustained and flanked by a powerful stone embankment . Another platform, bottom, between 565m and 570m in elevation, is developed around that slope, surrounding the central hill district in north-east, and is, in turn, bounded by an even more powerful stony slope, which separates this built space surrounding area. In both structures are residential structures in the 3rd millennium BC.

2 – During the Iron Age, in 300 BC, the site was chosen for implementation of a “village”. This is a village of farmers, shepherds, metallurgists and manufacturers of glass ornaments. During the year 400/500 that their occupation lasted, on both platforms space “urban” has been subject to constant changes.

3 – Around the first century, its inhabitants built a system of walls on the top line of the embankments of the Chalcolithic period. There are two walls: an inner, fitted with a monumental entrance and surrounding the upper deck or “Acropolis”, one external, which borders the village from outside.

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

Central reception and interpretation

The building intended to accommodate the interpretive center of the archaeological site, located northwest of the fort hill.

The concept of the project study is organic food demand and an installation process of animal “asado”. The shape is a parallelepiped long to prepare a route. It nests in the depression between two hills, squeezing his hard parallelepiped shape against the rock mass and seeing the gross cubic structure torn threads against the laminated shale.

If we see, who first built here, superimposed stones to the slopes to define an “outside” and an “inside”, who came here later built small vertical walls on the tops of hedges and stone walls in place to defend itself.

At present, this structure is here to welcome, explain and explain. The place is not just a refuge, the village, the factory. It is place to find men, spaces and times that are a part of us.

The building is worked in the constructive expression of mater as a tent, reinforced concrete, supported by the front glass and metal sections with my back to the burrow fraga.

The entrance is where the curtain rises. Is made by the glass surface, directly into the reception and exhibition hall, which also serves as access to outdoor living space overlooking the entire landscape north of Castro.

Interpretation Centre by Paulo Gomes

The space hosts a small exhibition consisting of different materials and objects from the archaeological dig, and has a video installation where they spend several times the recovery site. The building will have sanitation facilities for visitors as well as a space bar linked to the reception. The interior space is open and fluid and enclosures are the only sanitary facilities and space for the water tank.

Access to the parking building will be only pedestrian and road winds its aim is to lead the visitor to observe more carefully the site and relationship with the extraordinary air gap Tua River valley. The technical building is located 30m north of the main building, would be fully buried. This building will install a generator capable of supplying electricity to the main building.

Architectural project: Paulo Alexandre Gomes Fernandes
Project Expertise: Norvir-Consultores de Engenharia, SA


See also:

.

Suncheon International Wetlands Center by G.Lab*Kielder Observatory by
Charles Barclay Architects
More photographs by
Nelson Garrido