Cheshm Cheran Bazi is a playground set within a 40-hectare olive orchard in Minoudasht, north-eastern Iran, adjacent to the Cheshm Cheran building—a rural complex designed by the architects in 2017 for visitor accommodation and collective farm activities. Commissioned by Farsh Farm (Khalil Farshbaf), the project extends the building’s original intent: not to treat the landscape as a backdrop, but to actively engage with it across multiple spatial levels.
Rather than introducing a detached object, the design builds on an existing metal grid structure originally used for arboricultural training within the orchard. This framework becomes both constraint and generator, shaping a response to fixed geometries, tree locations, and ongoing agricultural use. Within it, a series of circular platforms are inserted at varying heights—either suspended from or supported by the grid—spiraling around tree trunks and gradually rising toward the main building, creating a continuous spatial and visual connection between ground, canopy, and architecture.
Constructed from locally available metal profiles shaped through rolling techniques, the lightweight modular platforms are paired with perforated plastic flooring developed by local craftsmen and regional manufacturers, allowing light, air, and tree shadows to filter through and intensify the sensory presence of the orchard. Integrated play elements such as swings, slides, and rotating surfaces are distributed throughout this layered system, forming a vertically articulated playground embedded within and inseparable from the agricultural landscape.