FISHERMEN’S WHARF PAVILION
20 May 2020
As part of a new hospitality complex outside Jiaxing, China, the Fisherman’s Wharf Pavilion will provide a small boathouse that encourages visitors to go sailing, fish and integrate with the natural landscape.
MADAM and HEXIA architects present the Fishermen’s Wharf Pavilion as part of the complex dubbed Ginkgo Swan Lake. To be integrated into the natural surroundings, the ongoing project comprises 11 pavilions, each carefully designed by different international offices.
With three of these pavilions designed by MADAM, the complex forms a unique and diverse ensemble of landmarks scattered around a lake full of wildlife. Several of these pavilions house subsidiary hotel programming while others offer visitors points of engagement with the natural landscape.
Based in Madrid and Amsterdam, MADAM sensitively designed the Fishermen’s Wharf beneath the lakeside dunes as a landform pavilion within the complex. The pavilion is designed together with China-based Hexia Architects to be as hidden as possible within the rolling topography.
Programmed as a small boathouse and café, the space is situated on an island along the east shore of the lake, integrated within a natural area rich in wildlife. The landscape of dunes with its low vegetation hosts a wide range of nesting birds. The space offers visitors fishing and rowing boats to rent, introducing the opportunity to fully enjoy the lake, go fishing or visit other pavilions along the lakeshore.
MADAM and Hexia’s Fishermen’s Wharf comprises two land-art cutouts that subtly allow access through the landform pavilion. The first opens discreetly outward toward the main access to the island. The design team seeks to suggest a sort of burrow hole that does not distract the visitor from the natural beauty of the site. The other opens the pavilion more broadly to face the lake.
A soft, curving cutout extends into the water, discretely subtracting finger-shaped docks out of the island, which helps visitors to hop on and off their boats.
Via designboom | Images courtesy of MADAM