Chengdu, China
Transforming Chengdu’s skyline, the 540,000-square-foot Chengdu Natural History Museum, designed by Pelli Clarke & Partners and CSWADI, is a major cultural landmark for the city, which is experiencing economic growth as a new hub for high-tech and entrepreneurship
The project successfully synthesizes the historical culture and context of Chengdu as it delves into the soul of the local elements “Shu Mountain, Shu Road, Shu Water”.
For its innovative design, the project has been awarded a 2024 American Architecture Award by the The Chicago Athenaeum Museum of Architecture and Design and The European Centre for Architecture Art Design and Urban Studies.
The building massing was inspired by the Sichuan mountain forms created by the shifting of ancient tectonic plates of the Chengdu region.
The volumes reflect the rock breaking apart and shifting with the horizontal and vertical forces.
The building forms lift from the ground at certain moments to reveal the public spaces within, at the same time maintaining a firm anchor to the earth.
The individual mountains, or rock volumes, are realized as distinct exhibit spaces, separated and held together by light-filled public spaces.
The narrative of tectonic plates also influenced the selection of materials, in particular the local granite of the exterior façade.
The organically shaped and composed perforations in the stone were devised to create the impression of snow-covered mountains during the day, with LED backlighting reflecting the stars lit at night.
The second most significant inspiration was the mountain roads, the Shu Roads, a system of wood plank roads supported from the sides of cliffs.
The Shu Road emerges as the Dino Box, connecting the second level to the third and similarly suspended from the sides of the stone volumes.
It was designed to be experienced as an adventure—a sloping, interactive space connecting the second level to the third where visitors can walk amongst the dinosaurs positioned along the path and suspended from the ceiling.
The clefts between the rock forms are transparent and glassy, designed to encourage reflection, observation, and interaction.
These in-between spaces are visual and physical connections between the exhibits, and likewise to the city, street, landscape, and canal.
The existing Dongfeng Canal on the eastern edge of the site is mirrored by a network of waterways and reflecting pools.
Plant form, texture, and color are woven together to create terraced gradients that graphically recall the geometries of the historical agricultural landscape and create unique experiences- Wetland Garden, Bamboo Garden, Water Lily Garden, and a Seasonal Plant Garden.
The interactive water drape at the north building volume is visible from the street.
Building forms are reflected in the shallow pools at north of the site.
The museum is a preeminent institution for science and culture, welcoming visitors from around the world with expansive exhibits, public spaces, shops, a café, a cinema, state-of-the-art educational facilities, and a verdant landscape that invites gathering and connection.
Project: Chengdu Natural History Museum
Architects: Pelli Clarke & Partners
Design Team: Fred W. Clarke, Kristin Hawkins, Cory Frost, Hongxi Yang, Rong Chen, Ileana Dumitriu, Olivia Huang, Jie Zhang, Chen Chen, and Beidi Zhang
Cswadi Chief Architect: Yi Liu and Bo Xiao
Cswadi Design Team: Yang Yang, Chenxiao Shu, Shunkai Yan, Yu Liu, Yao Wu, and Peng Sha
General Contractor: China Railway Construction Engineering Group
Client: Chengdu City Construction Investment & Management Group Co. (CDCI)
Photographers: Zhen Xin, Arch-Exist Photography, CDCI, Xiaobin Lv, and CSWADI