SCIENCE VS NATURE IN THE GARDEN
24 Aug 2016
A landscape design by Snøhetta that reflects its surprising and unexpected scientific setting is a blend of sculptural form and functional landscape that comes together to form ‘Land Art’.
Lovers of ‘land art’ will be pleased to see earthworks celebrated in a somewhat unexpected location: on the grounds of a synchrotron radiation laboratory. Snøhetta’s landscape architecture team designed a sculptural and functional landscape for the MAX IV Laboratory, which recently opened this summer just outside Lund, Sweden. Nearly 50 acres of formerly agricultural land were sculpted into land art with a focus on functionality and sustainability.
Undulating grassy swells reminiscent of ocean waves dominate the MAX IV Laboratory landscape and are placed in an arc formation radiating out of the circular, Fojab-designed synchrotron facility. Inspired by the rural landscape and perhaps radiation waves, the sinuous landscape is more than just eye candy. The landscape architects used computer models to design a wave landscape that mitigated ground vibrations, optimised cut and fill strategies, and used the valleys of the mounds to manage stormwater onsite, with help from a dry and wet pond. Maintenance is minimised thanks to the use of local native meadow grasses, which can be trimmed with grazing sheep.
“The step from advanced geometry to fabrication is still one of the largest challenges we face in design today,” write the landscape architects. “In MAX IV, the process was like having a giant 3D printer producing the project on a 1:1 scale. The high-tech research facility together with the low- tech meadowland creates the iconic image of the waves that protects the research facility from the vibrations. The digital model gets a final analog interpretation through the hand of the machine operator and native meadow grasses maintained by sheep to tell a fun and functional story of this research laboratory.”
Officially opened in June 2016, the lab is the first phase of a development project that aims to turn the rural lands northeast of Lund into a “Science City”.