Atelier Z+ 上海致正建筑设计有限公司

Wetland Research and Education Center

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Wetland Research and Education Center 

Atelier Z+

ARCHITECTS
Atelier Z+

MANUFACTURERS
法锌(上海)贸易有限公司

STRUCTURE DESIGN
Zhun Zhang

GENERAL CONTRACTOR
Shanghai Hydraulic Engineering Group Co. Ltd.

STRUCTURE CONSULTANT
And Office For Architecture & Structure

PROJECT ARCHITECTS
Yanlin Jin(Schematic Design, Developing Design, & Construction Design), Yue Xu(Construction Coordination)

DESIGN TEAM
Jiaxi Wang, Liyao Hu, Yi Liu, Yanan Zhang, Jiaqiu Sun, Min Yang, Chujin Xue

PARTNERS IN CHARGE
Wei Zhou, Bin Zhang

PHOTOGRAPHS
Hao Chen

AREA
4092 m²

YEAR
2019

LOCATION
Shanghai, China

CATEGORY
Research Center

Text description provided by architect.

Located at the easternmost point of Chongming Island, at the mouth of the Yangtze River, Dongtan Wetland is a sort of estuary tidal flat wetland. This wetland sits in the middle of the “East Asia - Australia” route which is known as one of the eight migration routes for birds of the world.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

As a very important migration corridor for waterfowl in the Asian-Pacific region, Dongtan Wetland also becomes one of the most significant gathering places and habitats for wild birds.

In the 1990s, an invasive plant spartina alterniflora was introduced to reinforce the tidal flat, which then result in the ecological deterioration of the wetland. 

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

To deal with the issue, Shanghai Chongming Dongtan National Nature Reserve started ecological control on spartina alterniflora and environment optimization of bird habitats in 2013. The whole project was completed in 2019.

As a supporting facility of this project, the Research and Education Center was built as an important platform of scientific research monitoring, bird banding, law enforcement of management and protection, science education.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Besides, it serves for raising both awareness and display of ecological and environmental protection as well as promote worldwide cooperation and exchange.

The site is situated in a restored reed wetland in the northeast of the Nature Reserve, where the water and the sky merge in one colour, few people tread, flocks of birds perch.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

With modesty and respect, we suppose the building would be in harmony with the natural area. The inspiration is from secluded shacks scattering between the mountains and waters, which was described by the ancient Chinese landscape painter Wang Meng in the fourteenth century.

With the intention of minimizing the impact on the local ecosystem whenever this place is under construction or in use, the architectural volume is divided and scattered, forming a group of settlements above the piling platform, floating on the water and hidden among the reeds.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Five buildings of different volumes including the conference and exhibition, the canteen, the research, and the dormitory are cross-connected by a zigzag trestle bridge.

Through the conversion of prototype and the control of scale, the atmosphere of indoor and outdoor spaces could be in response to the environment specificity such as sky, wetland, reeds, and flying birds.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Enlightened by the “shack with a double pitched roof” in Wang Meng’s painting, we turned the double-pitched roof over, made a “Y-shape” cantilever structure, juxtaposed these two “Y-shape” independent units, and created a new double Y shape space (YY).

This creative idea has brought this prototype new spatial meaning. Firstly, the space covered by these two Y-shape structures is given a sense of shelter and created a fixed horizontal vision towards the vast wetland, while the openness of the ridge is made extend towards the sky.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Secondly, the counter-slope space above the roof offers the feeling of living in a micro-valley, where visitors can enjoy the cropping and re-composition of broader horizontal vision.

Moreover, compared with the veranda of lateral eaves gallery of the double-pitched roof prototype, the veranda of the new structure has the space firstly pressing down and then lifting up, creating the feeling of openness to the environment.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

With a series of juxtapositions and variations of Y-shape unit structure, we designed a series of continuous saw-tooth roofs and created covered spaces with scale differences where multi-functional programs are available.

With the organization of circulation, distribution of courtyards, variation of transparency of enclosures, differentiation of structural span and height, and the combination of ridge skylights and clerestories, there is no clear boundary between different functional spaces, peoples are encouraged to use them in a flexible way.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Besides, this special linear pattern of space organization has brought unique indoor experience between in-position view and in-motion view.

When staying in a certain space unit, peoples are able to enjoy a body-enveloping experience under the roof with the view parallel to the structural unit, and the external natural scenery in front of the eye; while walking through different space units, with the rhythm of variation in height and light, they will feel as walking in a garden-courtyard house.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

This unique experience is strongly intensified on the roof of the conference & exhibition building: In response to the site features, we have evocated a flashback interpretation through alternating and combining the distant eye-level view of wetland from the “valley” on the roof and the close overlooking view of the indoor scene from the skywalk under the roof.

The scattered building volumes are fragmented by the overhanging saw-tooth roofs with deep eaves which successfully eliminate the scale difference between buildings, and also are blurred by overlapped deep shadows and reflection above the water.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Considering that weather-proof and maintenance of this facility are quite challenging work in high humidity and salinity conditions, the light steel or wooden structure was abandoned in our design.

Instead, reinforced concrete is selected to build with the simplicity of tectonics.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Building A, B, C were built by a Y-shaped cantilevered reinforced concrete bent frame structure with crisscross section and partial folded-plate. 

Among these buildings, the cantilever of building A was so large that the whole structure had to be constructed with steel-reinforced concrete and the exhibition hall was partly designed with steel mezzanine; buildings D and E were constructed with concrete folded-plate structure.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

In order to expose the crudeness from the concrete structure in wetland, long pine timber formworks were used in the as-cast-finish concrete construction to obtain natural wood texture. 

The non-structural enclosure and partition walls were also coated with refurbished recycled timber formworks to unify the material expression.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Since sheltered from long overhang eaves, bird-friendly floor-to-ceiling windows with vertical grilles which provide the visitors maximum field view are used for the most external envelopes.

he trestle bridge and the water platform were paved with precast concrete battens with cracks left between each other, which not only enhanced the feeling of walking over water but also made room for reed growth. 

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen

Moreover, all the “valleys” bottom on the roof was covered with slightly undulating soil and low-maintenance planted miscanthus and shrubs.

For the purpose of environment integration and sustainable recycling in the future, all the pitched roofs trimmed with titanium-zinc sheets were covered with indigenous reed straw reaped and processed under the supervision of local experienced reed weavers.

Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen


Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen
Wetland Research and Education Center
© Hao Chen


Wetland Research and Education Center
site plan
Wetland Research and Education Center
1F plan
Wetland Research and Education Center
dining sector 1F plan

Wetland Research and Education Center
research sector 1F plan
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector 1F plan
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector BF plan
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector RF plan

Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector RF plan


Wetland Research and Education Center
axonometric
Wetland Research and Education Center
axonometric


Wetland Research and Education Center
dining sector section
Wetland Research and Education Center
research sector section
Wetland Research and Education Center
dining sector section
Wetland Research and Education Center
dining sector section


Wetland Research and Education Center
research sector perspective section
Wetland Research and Education Center
dining sector perspective section
Wetland Research and Education Center
dormitory sector perspective section
Wetland Research and Education Center
dormitory sector perspective section

Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector section
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector section
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector section
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector section
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector perspective section
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector perspective section
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector perspective section


Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector details
Wetland Research and Education Center
dining sector details
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector details
Wetland Research and Education Center
conference and exhibition sector details


Wetland Research and Education Center
concept sketch

Wetland Research and Education Center
generation diagram

Wetland Research and Education Center
exploded axonometric

Atelier Z+ 上海致正建筑设计有限公司
Atelier Z+ 上海致正建筑设计有限公司
2555-13 Longteng Avenue, Shanghai, China 200232徐汇区龙腾大道2555-13号