Toni Areal Roof Garden Studio Vulkan Landscape Architecture
2018-10-08 00:00
© Filip Dujardin
(c)FilipDujardin
架构师提供的文本描述。密度,城市和令人兴奋的强度-在苏黎世西部30米以上的地面。在前托尼工厂所在地的新艺术大学的屋顶花园里,室外空间为学生们营造了一片绿色的绿洲,在这里,新的高楼大厦、技术建筑、烟囱、中庭和音乐厅层出不穷。
Text description provided by the architects. Density, urbanity and exciting intensity – 30 metres above ground in Zurich West. On the roof garden of the new University of the Arts on the site of the former Toni factory, the outdoor space creates a green oasis for students in an area where there has been a surge of new high-rises, technical buildings, chimneys, atriums and concert halls.
Text description provided by the architects. Density, urbanity and exciting intensity – 30 metres above ground in Zurich West. On the roof garden of the new University of the Arts on the site of the former Toni factory, the outdoor space creates a green oasis for students in an area where there has been a surge of new high-rises, technical buildings, chimneys, atriums and concert halls.
© Noemi Chow
(三)周诺美
Courtesy of Studio Vulkan Landscape Architecture
Vulkan园林工作室提供的服务
在这里,植物生长在木箱堆叠,创造一个像素状的崎岖景观。这是一个自相矛盾的花园:在建设的最后一天就建成并准备使用,与大多数公园不同,它还没有经历一个漫长的发展阶段。然而,郁郁葱葱的花园还远未完工-它的主要原则不是生长,而是衰败。一个2600平方米的城市世界,外观和激进的个性,一个小型私人花园。堆叠的盒子是在两年多的时间里预先种植的,混合了多种适合环境的植物,包括多年生植物、草本植物和柳树等小灌木。
Here, plants grow in wooden boxes stacked to create a pixel-like rugged landscape. It is a paradoxical garden: built in no time and ready for use on the final day of construction, it hasn’t, unlike most parks, gone through a long development phase. Yet the lush garden is far from finished – its primary principle is not growth, but decay. A 2,600 m2 urban world with the appearance and radical individuality of a small private garden. The stacked boxes were pre-cultivated over two years with a colourful mix of plants suitable for the environment, including perennials, herbs and small shrubs such as willow.
Here, plants grow in wooden boxes stacked to create a pixel-like rugged landscape. It is a paradoxical garden: built in no time and ready for use on the final day of construction, it hasn’t, unlike most parks, gone through a long development phase. Yet the lush garden is far from finished – its primary principle is not growth, but decay. A 2,600 m2 urban world with the appearance and radical individuality of a small private garden. The stacked boxes were pre-cultivated over two years with a colourful mix of plants suitable for the environment, including perennials, herbs and small shrubs such as willow.
© Daniela Valentini
达尼拉·瓦伦蒂尼
最终,盒子会腐烂,植物种类会混合,像素状的景观会长成柔软的土堆,形成屋顶的土壤层,从而促进植物的生长。这一具体的系统和强烈的特性是从一开始就对地点和设想的密集使用水平进行仔细研究的结果,再加上屋顶上的可用水、较短的施工周期和建筑对结构高度的限制。作为自然和人为的共生体,像素堆叠的崎岖世界反映了地方和环境。在这里,被广泛引用的景观建筑的过程已经被逆转:这一过程开始于表面上的终结-伴随着衰败。
Eventually, the boxes will decay, the plant species will mix and the pixelated landscape will grow into soft mounds, forming the roof’s base soil layer that will enable plant growth. This specific system and strong identity is the result of a careful study of the location and the envisaged intense level of use from the beginning, combined with the availability of water on the roof, short construction period and architectural limits on structural height. As a symbiosis of nature and artificiality, the rugged world of stacked pixels reflects the place and the environment. Here, the much-cited processuality of landscape architecture has been reversed: the process begins at the apparent end – with decay.
Eventually, the boxes will decay, the plant species will mix and the pixelated landscape will grow into soft mounds, forming the roof’s base soil layer that will enable plant growth. This specific system and strong identity is the result of a careful study of the location and the envisaged intense level of use from the beginning, combined with the availability of water on the roof, short construction period and architectural limits on structural height. As a symbiosis of nature and artificiality, the rugged world of stacked pixels reflects the place and the environment. Here, the much-cited processuality of landscape architecture has been reversed: the process begins at the apparent end – with decay.
© Daniela Valentini
达尼拉·瓦伦蒂尼
Architects Studio Vulkan Landscape Architecture
Location Pfingstweidstrasse 94, 8005 Zürich, Switzerland
Lead Architects EM2N Architects, Zurich; Studio Vulkan Landscape Architecture, Zurich
Area 2600.0 m2
Project Year 2014
Photographs Roland Bernath, Filip Dujardin, Noemi Chow, Daniela Valentini, Roland Tännler
Category Landscape Architecture
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