Inbo’s design for the water museum is located in the south-west of Ningbo, nearby one of China’s most magnificent cases of water engineering. Dating back to the year 833, the Tuoshanyan water system on one hand prevents the salt water from the sea to stream land inward and jeopardize fertile land while on the other hand it prevents flooding when stormwater from the mountain comes running down.
Dedicated to this unique historical piece of work, the museum concept directly reflects the typical section of the characteristic Tuoshanyan-dyke. The five main volumes are organized around the stepped central gathering space of the museum, resembling comparable configurations in the neighboring protected village.
The roof park on top of this central area connects the waterfront with the heritage park on either side of the museum to achieve an integrated culture and tourism ecosystem for the whole area. At the same time it contributes to the reduction of flooding risk, by collecting, storing, buffering and filtering rainwater before it is released to the surrounding landscape. Visitors will experience its bio-diversity with a variety of vegetation directly related to the specific conditions of each step.
The façade design is inspired by rocks in the river with water running off the edges, materialized with panels of dark-grey local natural stone with the size of the blocks in the Tuoshanyan-dyke. A gradient of glass panels allow daylight in the interior where necessary. Between the ‘rocks’ a frameless glass façade with an abstract interpretation of falling water printed on it, surrounds the stepped elevated roof park.
Collaborators: EDGE landscape design, Zhejiang Huazhan Engineering Research and Design Institute (ZHID)