Shunde Yunlu Wetland Museum | Studio Link-Arc

The Yunlu Wetland Museum is located in the Yunlu Wetland Park in Shunde, adjacent to an ecological island inhabited by 25,000 egrets. The building combines a bird-watching tower and a wetland museum, aiming to raise visitors’ awareness of the ecology of the wetland and provide a unique bird-watching experience.

© Tian Fangfang

The project originated from a bamboo forest planted by “Uncle Bird” Xian Quanhui here 26 years ago. With the influx of a large number of egrets, a good intention prompted the Uncle Bird to make this oasis an “egret paradise” in the city through decades of efforts. Now the Shunde government has expanded the protected area of Egret Paradise by 13 times, working with scientists,engineers and designers to restore water systems, update bamboo forests, and reshape this area into Yunlu Wetland Park.

1st Floor Plan

The architects chose to hide the building behind a row of existing cedar forests. The shape of the building consists of four vertically stacked concrete tubes, resembling four horizontally rotating “lenses” that capture the activities of egrets. The design aims to minimize the presence of the building and harmoniously coexist with the “indigenous creatures” in this area with a modest attitude. Looking at the museum from Egret Island, the building “disappears” into a lush subtropical forest.

Circulation Axon Diagram

Each tube of the museum is rotated to the optimal viewing direction according to the site conditions, forming four staggered “framing frames” in the internal space. The first to fourth floors respectively look towards the tree roots, trunks, crowns, and treetops. People can observe the swaying of tree shadows and the fluttering of birds on Egret Island from different heights inside the building. In this way, the traditional human-oriented architectural perspective is deconstructed into a nature-oriented scattered perspective.

© Tian Fangfang

The four superimposed tubes of the museum are divided into a vertical triangular atrium by a Boolean difference, which connects the volumes of the four floors together. The atrium is a common “viewpoint” for different perspectives inside the building. Standing here, one can simultaneously look into nature through the tubes in different directions. The viewfinder window at the end of the tube is like several carefully selected landscape paintings hanging in the space.

Yunlu Wetland Museum

© Arch-Exist

The building adopts a box-type concrete structure system. The side walls, top plate, and bottom plate of each tube work together to provide overall load-bearing support. Sunlight filters through the upper skylights, softened by deep beams, and penetrates into the interior of the building. Being in the building, people can physically perceive the flow of seasons and the change of nature.

Project Info:

Arch2O.com
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