Key:Germany | 1991 | Park






















项目概况:
Landschaftspark Duisburg-Nord designed by famous landscape designer Peter Latz in 1991 with an area of 230 hectares is a public park located in Duisburg-Meiderich, Germany. It closely associates itself with the past use of the site, which is the major milestone in landscape architecture. The designer preserved as much of the existing site of a coal and steel production plant as possible and found new uses for many of the old structures to build the park; the park design together with the original memory interweaves the industrial structure with the ecological green land, reducing the use of new material and the cost. The park was divided into four landscape layers: firstly, the railway lines still open or out of operation, are the most continuous connections also in the park. They form a filigree pattern, going deep into the living and working areas of the city quarters; secondly, the old waste water channel of the plant, exclusively fed by the clear rainwater, was through the whole water system and transformed into clear water flowing into Emscher River; thirdly, the road system formed by all kinds of bridges and footpaths in the park; fourthly, the system of specific programmatic elements and the unique gardens providing tourists the unique industrial landscape experience. These layers with their own system are isolated but connected by some unique elements, such as ramp, footstep, terrace and garden, offering the visual and functional symbol relationship.