Component 1 Mavis Ansu

Specificatio n:
Public toilets
Café
Theme: Natural Organic and Movement And Flow
• Barking Urban District Council purchased the land from Movers Farm for £330 in the early 1920s, and the park was established.
• The park first opened its doors in 1926. The park was created as part of the Greatfield housing estate's constructionafter World War I.
• The park's original drawings (from 1921) indicate a simple layout with a boundary path and shrub borders encircling a big grassed space. It was known as Movers Lane Playing Fields or Greatfield Recreation Grounds at the time, and it had three football fields. The existing route system, trees, and flowerbeds were added later.
• The park, however, was nevertheless designed in the conventional Victorian manner, with a broad encircling carriage road bordered by shrub beds and decorative gardens within. This is the design that is still in use today.
From this park the intricate lines of the white structures gives the illusion of waves a free waves flowing which allows civilians to have calming thought with the free flow environment.
Project: ( 3089 ) Abbey Pool
Splashpad
Client: Cambridge City Council
Design: Ustigate Waterplay/ Vortex International
Main Contractor: Ustigate
Water Management: Flow
Through System
Installation:2014 / Area: 156m²
The Abbey splashpad, consists of 11 water features, includingtipping buckets, water cannons, and spray jets.
The Impression SanjieLiu, Yangshuo, Guilin is in one of the most dramatic landscapes in China. Endless greenery surrounds the site filling spacebetween large karst towers of rock. With a landscape,so grand any moves to dismiss it, let alone compete would make littlesense. With this understanding,it was decided that the natural elements themselves would form the premise for what architecture would inhabitthe site, one element, in particular, bamboo.
Atpresent,largeclustersof bamboocovermostofthesite, creatingstructuresofmingling pipesandleaves.Tocoincidewith whatisalreadythere,thenew architecturelookedatborrowing thematerialityofthebamboo, reconfiguringittoformnewspace.
The design for the Hunter’s Point South park uses a large number of sustainable initiatives, transforming 30 acres of post-industrial waterfront into a program-rich public spacethat at the same time acts as a protective perimeter for the neighboring residential community.
The park’s central green, designed to accommodate floodwaters, is framed by a pavilion and café with views across the river. An urban beach, rail garden, dog runs, and play areas offer places of active recreation at the water’s edge.
Completed in two phases, the park incorporates active and passive recreation. The northern precinct is designed as a heavily programmed spacethat accommodates a greater amount of daily use than the passive landscape of the southern precinct.