Spindly orange walkways are raised above the waters and meadows of this wetland park developed by landscape architects Turenscape on a neglected river in China . 

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

The Slow Down: Liupanshui Minghu Wetland Park was made by Beijing landscape studio Turenscape for the River Suichenghe, in the city of Liupanshui, Guizhou Province.


Connected story: Riverside park by Topiaris Landscape Architecture functions a boardwalk and a bird observatory


Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

The industrial city – when dominated by coal, steel and cement factories and the pollution from their industrial chimneys – sits in a valley surrounded by limestone hills with the river running even though its centre.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

Now, elevated walkways wind across the wetland on concrete stilts plugged into the riverbed silt, whilst grasses and flowers line the river and an observation tower produced from metal framework perches on a waterside platform.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

The regeneration project was commissioned by the nearby government as component of a campaign of environmental improvement for the city.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

“A rainbow bridge that flies above the wetland park acts as an access into the created wetland,” said the architects, “and as a linkage that invites the ever busy residents to ‘slowdown’ their pace to appreciate the every day landscape surrounding the city, the beauty of which has been forgotten and misused more than the past decades.”

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

The bulk of the project is situated about the river’s drainage basin, where pedestrian and bicycle paths thread across the expanse of water and around its perimeter.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

The orange causeways take a twisting route across the terrain, designed to slow down the pace of promenaders.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

The architects widened the banks of the river, which was channelled into a narrow flow in the 1970s as an unsuccessful solution to flooding.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

“The former meandering mother river became an ugly concrete, lifeless ditch and its capacity for flood retention and environmental remediation was completely lost,” mentioned the architects.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

They also added a seres of interlocking bioswales – terraced pools created to stem the flow of storm water and strain surface sediment from the water.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

It is hoped these will also act as “a green sponge” that filters the dangerous pollutants washed into the water from neighbouring agricultural land.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

Mud banks emerge above the water’s surface at the edges of the terraces to help patches of planting, although narrow decked pathways fork around the pockets of water and an avenue of trees lines a single crescent-shaped trail.

Minghu Wetland Park by Turenscape

The 90-hectare wetland park is the very first phase in the wider infrastructure development and is anticipated to become a catalyst for other urban improvement. The internet site was officially designated as a National Wetland Park in 2013.

Minghu Wetland Park by TurenscapeWeb site program
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