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A wandering dragon-like Emerald Screen Pergola by Wutopia Lab

Project name:
Emerald Screen Pergola
Architecture firm:
Wutopia Lab
Location:
Bogong Island, Wuxi, China
Photography:
CreatAR lmages
Principal architect:
YU Ting
Landscape Architecture:
Wutopia Lab
Design team:
FANG Xiaobin, AN Yingjie
Collaborators:
Project Architect: MU Zhilin; Construction Drawing Design Team: CAI Zhongming, SHI Wei; Plant Design Team: SHAO Jie, LI Feiran, ZHANG Licheng; Construction Drawing Design Firm: Wuxi Culture and Tourism Construction Development Co., Ltd; LTDChief Planner of W'ECO Design Festival: HOU Zhengguang, SUN Qun, XU Yun; W'ECO Design Festival Planning Firm: Beijing Keyi Cultural & Creative Enterprise Management Co., Ltd; Lighting: Chloe ZHANG; Featured Models: DAI Ruoyu, FANG Xiaobin
Area:
925 ㎡
Design year:
2023
Completion year:
2024
Engineer:
Contractor:
Wuxi Taihu Mingzhu Ecological Restoration Co., Ltd
Material:
Steel, Net, Climbing Plants
Budget:
Undisclosed
Client:
Wuxi Cultural Tourism Development Group Co., Ltd
Status:
Built
Typology:
Park

Here the frailest leaves of me yet my strongest lasting.

Walt Whitman

In March 2024, Wutopia Lab's wandering dragon-like Emerald Screen Pergola was officially unveiled at Bogong Island Ecology Park in Wuxi, China.The Emerald Screen Pergola is an important architectural feature in classical Chinese gardens. It is typically constructed from bamboo or wood, forming roofless corridors, pavilions, and walls. Climbing plants are then grown to eventually cover the walls and roofs. This design not only creates a visual focus that integrates nature with space but also fosters a series of cultural activities related to flowers, making it a significant cultural symbol preserved in traditional Chinese paintings.

However, as a temporary structure, apart from the flower trellises, most other parts have disappeared from the remains of classical gardens. Bogong Island originally had a 1.2-kilometer-long steel trellis covered with wisteria and roses. Over time, it fell into disrepair and became unsafe, necessitating a reconstruction. Wutopia Lab used the feather-like shape of leaves as a prototype to create various combinations of wall and roof structures along the 1.2-kilometer stretch.

These structures open, close, stand alone, overlap, and even disappear, redefining the previously monotonous design of the trellis corridor. The rich and vibrant interplay of light evokes the image of a Dragon Dance, hence the name "A wandering dragon-like Emerald Screen Pergola". The corridor's structure uses round steel as its framework and is covered with steel meshes that have been painted white for plants to climb. Before the plants climb up, it creates a mist-like visual amidst the beautiful scenery.

I decided to design a flower pavilion to serve as both the entrance to the corridor and the park. Similarly, I used the white feather-like steel meshes by stacking them layer by layer to create a central, roofless structure. This would be my semi-transparent Pantheon. Its completion will also mark the grand reopening of Bogong Island Ecology Park.

The current phase, featuring the white transparent Emerald Screen Pergola and the flower pavilion, marks the first stage. The second stage will see plants climbing the corridor to transform it into a green structure. In the third stage, flowers will bloom, with various colors of ivy, jasmine, roses, honeysuckle, roses, and retained wisteria blossoming in succession. Thus, this vibrant wandering dragon-like structure will come to life, seemingly ready to take flight in its natural surroundings. This represents Wutopia Lab's commitment to innovatively modernizing traditional designs using contemporary materials and forms.

This is the grass that grows wherever the land is and the water is...

Walt Whitman


By Liliana Alvarez

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