Rooted in the genius
loci of Moscow and the site, the Zaryadye Park, a proposal by the Turenscape, is designed as an urban ecosystem that provides
multiple eco-services to the city and people.
By overlaying the
richness of site’s historical layers, the Park becomes a living puzzle that
locks together the city’s memory, culture, ecology and people, which reveals
the memory of the past and makes a prophecy for the future.
Zaryadye Park is a
contemporary landscape with a new aesthetic based on environmental ethics: it
offers high performance and requires low maintenance; it repairs the broken
connections between man and nature. Its main feature – the Blue Circle is the perfect counterpoint
to the Red Square.
Challenges of the
site that the proposal needs to deal with are:
- Urban Ecology: storm water and snow melts from surrounding
- National Identity: an icon with representative, authentic, natural and cultural landscape
- Harsh Climate: cold winter and hot summer
- Recreation and Tourism: provides intimate spaces and also for activities in a crowd setting
- Heritage and history: existing buildings as open-air museum
- Site Connectivity: linking Red Square, waterfront, and context
In order to deal
with the challenges we adopted a design strategy, which provides:
- A functional ecosystem that cleans and filtrates city’s storm water and snow melt and support native biodiversity
- A new icon of Moscow that represents an authentic natural and cultural landscape
- An oasis that regulates the harsh climate and urban environment and acts as a retreat to provide an intimate experience of nature
- A place that gathers people and stages different activities in all seasons and weather
- A public ‘balcony’ and open museum for the city which catches the best views of Moscow’s heritage skyline
- A uniting space that connects the surrounding urban fabric and the waterfront
Zaryadye Park – the Blue
Circle of Moscow
– is an integration of 4 layers. Firstly, it is a system of Designed Natures.
It is composed of 5 major landscape elements that represent Russian vernacular
landscapes – them being, the monastery gardens, meadow, constructed wetland,
reflection pond and birch forest.
Secondly, the scheme
brings to the fore the footprints remnants on the site. The design visualizes
the imprints of the historical buildings and streetscape that lies underneath,
and transforms these imprints into a functional wetland and ground pattern.
Thirdly, there are
the Winter gardens. Service facilities including café, restaurant, and
temporary exhibitions are contained in glass houses. Lastly, there is the
Boardwalk and Skywalk system that are detached from the ground and that
integrate seating with platforms and environmental interpretation system for
people to experience the designed natures.














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