科普帕卡公园

景观设计 / 居住环境 2021-8-27 18:30

科普帕卡公园
Kopupaka Park

地峡集团:Kopupaka公园代表了一种以设计为导向的方法,将社区设施与工程和生态相结合。曾经被认为是“规划后留下的空间”的公园已经转变为一个混合公园,对雨水保护区的设计和使用提出了挑战,并说明了城市增长如何与生态恢复相平衡,创造新的公共空间,发展强烈的地方感。
Isthmus Group: Kopupaka Park represents a design-led approach that integrates community amenities with engineering and ecology. What once might have been considered ‘space left over after planning’ has been transformed into a hybrid park that challenges expectations around the design and use of stormwater reserves, and illustrates how urban growth can be balanced with ecological restoration, the creation of new public space and the development of a strong sense of place.

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus


Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus


Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus


Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus


Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus

Kopupaka Park

© Isthmus


将历史和重叠功能交织在一起的概念是公园的主导设计叙事,通过公园的支流和人工湿地以物理形式表达“线、织、集”的概念。虽然Kopupaka公园提供了基础设施,用于衰减和滞留新市镇中心街道和建筑物的雨水径流,但这种新型的市政基础设施,在传统边界、限制和功能重叠的地方,有着紧密的文化、生态、文化和文化覆盖,社区和(大部分是看不见的)工程目标。
The notion of weaving histories and overlapping functions together is the dominant design narrative of the park, with a concept of ‘thread, weave and gather’ articulated in physical form through the merging tributary and constructed wetlands of the park. While Kopupaka Park provides the infrastructure for the attenuation and detention of stormwater run-off from the streets and buildings of a new town centre, this new type of civic infrastructure, where traditional boundaries, constraints and functions overlap, has a tight overlay of cultural, ecological, community and (mostly unseen) engineering objectives.

可见的是该项目的文化方面,特别是弯曲的木材“篮子”,它们已融入三个主要湿地池塘的边缘。这些功能性雕塑抽象地参考了编织成篮子和鳗鱼罐的哈拉凯克(亚麻)。虽然形式看起来复杂且定制,但事实上,它们是由一个标准的木材婴儿床固定系统构成的:一个现成的系统,适合以曲线形式表达传统编织图案。
What is visible are the cultural aspects of the project, especially the curving timber ‘baskets’ that have been integrated into the edges of three main wetland ponds. These functional sculptures abstractly reference harakeke (flax) woven into kete (baskets) and hīnaki (eel pots). While the forms appear complex and bespoke, they are in fact constructed from a standard timber-crib retaining system: an off-the-shelf system adapted to allow the expression of a traditional weaving pattern in curvaceous form.

Data

Landscape Architect: Isthmus Group
Client: Auckland Council
Awards: WAF – World Landscape of the Year Winner
Collaborators:
RCP Project managers
NZRPG Developers Delivery Team
Blue Barn Consulting
Rawstorne Studio
Coffey Projects
Thomas Civil
Cato Bolam

科普帕卡公园