Creating an Urban Splash
Architects of urban projects are increasingly in thrall to water, believing it benefits them in a number of ways — from the aesthetic to the psychological. In one sense, when reflected in water, buildings look larger and more imposing. Yet water’s evanescent, organic qualities can also soften and appear to dematerialise their severe lines, even making them look ethereal.
Julie 28, 2014 | 10:00 pm CUT

The five restaurant buildings at Hassell’s Palm Island project in Chongqing, China, which glow glamorously at night. Their organic shapes complement the lagoons and ‘water courtyard’ they front


Chongqing is one of China’s hottest, most humid cities in summer, but at Palm Island breezes blowing over the water and its buildings’ reflective facades help to reduce temperatures

OMA’s surreal runway for Prada’s spring/summer 2015 menswear collection in Milan last June paired a stylised, sapphire-blue pool and a carpeted catwalk in a subterranean, industrial space


According to its project leader Ippolito Pestellini Laparelli, OMA’s unusual intervention ‘questions the relationship between outdoors and indoors: water invades the space, changing its proportions and reflecting unexpected points of view’


French studio TVK’s radical remodelling of Paris’s Place de la République has vastly enlarged the square and includes a popular, shallow pool that epitomises today’s trend towards understated, urban water features


OMGEVING’s similarly serene water feature, which fronts Averbode Abbey near Diest, Belgium, serves another purpose typical of contemporary, urban water features — reflecting architecture, in this case the baroque abbey



Westpol’s quirky observation deck in the centre of a lake, reached by a ramp, sees the city almost submerged by nature, with visitors surrounded by reflective water and lush woodland


Surrounding trees in Mayfair, London, this water feature by Tadao Ando and Blair Associates creates an urban oasis. It also periodically sprays clouds of misty water to arrestingly atmospheric effect



AT Design Office’s ultra-futuristic concept for a Floating City, an energy-efficient, sustainable metropolis on a 10-sq-km island dreamt up as an alternative to destroying the earth’s countryside
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