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Click
on images at left for larger color views. [Google Earth link]
One of this year's recipients of an ASLA
Professional Award is the Tanghe River Park in Qinhuangdao
in China's Hebei Province. Designed by Turenscape
and the Graduate School of Landscape Architecture at Peking
University, the project also goes by the name The Red Ribbon
for the half kilometer (0.3 miles) snaking, multi-functional
bench that stands out all
year long.
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According to the architects,
the 20-hectare (50-acre) park
is sited on "a river
corridor at the outskirts of the fast developing city of Qinhuangdao,
with lush vegetation and diverse species but occupied by deserted
irrigation structures and garbage
dumps." Their aim of preserving the natural habitats
along the river while inserting recreational
and educational uses was accomplished via the red ribbon and
its adjacent boardwalk. |
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As well as providing seating
and orienting visitors to the park, the red ribbon also integrates
lighting and native plantings to not only justify the expense
on the object but make it the only object needed
along its length. No light poles are needed alongside the
ribbon, though periodically along its lenght it is broken
by small pavilions, devices
that further orient the visitor and also provide shelter. |
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At night the fiber-steel bench
glows from the inside, like some strange nocturnal alien that
protects the park. It's this alien character -- almost the
opposite of the ecologically-minded landscape -- that surely
attracted the ASLA jury, who called it, "a celebration
integrating artistic elements into a natural landscape in
an ingenious way." It's a good lesson for parks that
strive to draw people not only to their recreational uses
but to their educational uses as well, in the process getting
people to experience nature and hopefully see it as something
not only attractive but also inspiring.
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Tanghe River Park in Qinhuangdao, China, by Turenscape |
2007.04.30 |
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Click
on images below for larger views.
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