Figure 1.
Urban drainage terminology, drawn by the authors adapted from Fletcher et al. [
6].
Figure 1.
Urban drainage terminology, drawn by the authors adapted from Fletcher et al. [
6].
Figure 2.
Methodological framework. Source: authors.
Figure 2.
Methodological framework. Source: authors.
Figure 3.
Selected site China, Zhejiang, Ningbo, Yong River waterfront. Satellite Image: Maxar Technologies, 2019, Google Earth.
Figure 3.
Selected site China, Zhejiang, Ningbo, Yong River waterfront. Satellite Image: Maxar Technologies, 2019, Google Earth.
Figure 4.
Masterplan Lifelong learning: 1. Floating residues filtration, 2. Biotopes, 3. Canals, 4. Detention Ponds, 5. Wet/dry islands, 6. Infiltration Zones (bio-swales), designed by: Tianning Ren, Yulin Zhang, Yixuan Chen, Jiamei Song, 2020.
Figure 4.
Masterplan Lifelong learning: 1. Floating residues filtration, 2. Biotopes, 3. Canals, 4. Detention Ponds, 5. Wet/dry islands, 6. Infiltration Zones (bio-swales), designed by: Tianning Ren, Yulin Zhang, Yixuan Chen, Jiamei Song, 2020.
Figure 5.
Proposed water cleaning canal, designed by: Tianning Ren, Yulin Zhang, Yixuan Chen, Jiamei Song, 2020.
Figure 5.
Proposed water cleaning canal, designed by: Tianning Ren, Yulin Zhang, Yixuan Chen, Jiamei Song, 2020.
Figure 6.
Six urban spaces connected to the water canal. Top row (A–C): diverse plant filtration; Bottom row (D–F): integration of public spaces to water features, designed by: Tianning Ren, Yulin Zhang, Yixuan Chen, Jiamei Song, 2020.
Figure 6.
Six urban spaces connected to the water canal. Top row (A–C): diverse plant filtration; Bottom row (D–F): integration of public spaces to water features, designed by: Tianning Ren, Yulin Zhang, Yixuan Chen, Jiamei Song, 2020.
Figure 7.
Masterplan metamorphosis, a selection of strategies’ locations: 4. Detention ponds, 6. Infiltration Zones (bio-swales), 7. Rainwater harvesting system, 8. Water treatment facility. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 7.
Masterplan metamorphosis, a selection of strategies’ locations: 4. Detention ponds, 6. Infiltration Zones (bio-swales), 7. Rainwater harvesting system, 8. Water treatment facility. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 8.
Masterplan detail presenting green public spaces and structures supporting WSD. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 8.
Masterplan detail presenting green public spaces and structures supporting WSD. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 9.
Render of open-air theater. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 9.
Render of open-air theater. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 10.
Section of bath. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 10.
Section of bath. Designed by: Siyuan Shen, Yanning Li, Felicia Gunawan, Eunsun Li, Yukuan Wang, 2020.
Figure 11.
Masterplan coexistence agreement, a selection of strategies’ locations: 3. Canals, 4. Detention ponds, 6. Infiltration zones, 9. Green roofs. Designed by: Zhengyou Chen, Tiancheng Kang, Yuhang Tao, Hanwen Xu, 2020.
Figure 11.
Masterplan coexistence agreement, a selection of strategies’ locations: 3. Canals, 4. Detention ponds, 6. Infiltration zones, 9. Green roofs. Designed by: Zhengyou Chen, Tiancheng Kang, Yuhang Tao, Hanwen Xu, 2020.
Figure 12.
Top row (A–C): big water: swimming areas, medium water: studios, and small water: infiltration zone; Bottom row (D–F): big water: theater, medium water: view park, small water: market. Designed by: Zhengyou Chen, Tiancheng Kang, Yuhang Tao, Hanwen Xu, 2020.
Figure 12.
Top row (A–C): big water: swimming areas, medium water: studios, and small water: infiltration zone; Bottom row (D–F): big water: theater, medium water: view park, small water: market. Designed by: Zhengyou Chen, Tiancheng Kang, Yuhang Tao, Hanwen Xu, 2020.
Table 1.
Review of WSD and WSUD in scientific databases until January 2020. Source: authors.
Table 1.
Review of WSD and WSUD in scientific databases until January 2020. Source: authors.
| Google Scholar 1 | Science Direct 2 | Jstor 3 |
---|
Searched Terms | WSD | WSUD | WSD | WSUD | WSD | WSUD |
---|
AND pedagogy | 13 | 87 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
AND teaching | 119 | 3340 | 1 | 9 | 0 | 4 |
AND studio | 60 | 367 | 0 | 8 | 3 | 7 |
AND “architectural design” | 39 | 255 | 0 | 10 | 1 | 3 |
Total | 231 | 4049 | 1 | 28 | 4 | 15 |
Table 2.
Studio structure. Source: authors.
Table 2.
Studio structure. Source: authors.
| First Semester | Second Semester |
---|
Project 1 | Project 2 | Project 3 |
---|
Student Year | Third | Masterplan 1 | Housing | Cultural Program |
Fourth | Project Brief | Public Program (Thesis) |
Table 3.
Criteria from Wright [
32] vs. approaches for Blue Architecture studio.
Table 3.
Criteria from Wright [
32] vs. approaches for Blue Architecture studio.
Succinct Criteria [32] | Blue Architecture Studio Approaches |
---|
1. Social Engagement | Site visit, Community Interviews, Site analysis. |
2. Learn different cultures | Rich environment: professors, reviewers, and students from distinctive nationalities and backgrounds. |
3. Collectivity and Interaction | Students from year 3 and 4 work together in mixed teams. Students develop projects for Tectonics, Humanities, and Integrated Design to Architecture in support to the studio design. |
4. Environmental And Cultural context | A post-industrial site is proposed for the design, which requires environmental measures and offers substantial cultural background. Site is riverfront. |
5. Technology and Environment | Application of water strategies is the focus of the studio; however, other environmental considerations are proposed by students. |
6. Materiality | Reuse, recycle, renovate, and retrofit are encouraged. |
7. Sustainability focus | Readings in WSD are available in digital format (Moodle, online education platform of the university) and physical (library). A WSD manual [1] is available in the studio, the book River, Design, Space [33] is available for consultation in the library. |
Table 4.
Average rainfall in Ningbo.
Table 4.
Average rainfall in Ningbo.
Rainfall | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
---|
mm 1 | 73.2 | 77.6 | 133.9 | 105.6 | 114.6 | 198.1 | 178.3 | 166.7 | 170.8 | 83.1 | 75.0 | 54.7 |
days 2 | 12.6 | 12.3 | 16.9 | 15.3 | 14.7 | 16.4 | 13.1 | 14.5 | 14.1 | 10.3 | 8.9 | 8.5 |
Table 5.
Group 1 strategies. Source: Authors.
Table 5.
Group 1 strategies. Source: Authors.
WSD Strategy * | Students Approaches |
---|
1 Floating residues filtration | Demanded redesign of waterfront with a large canal, consideration of river flow and tides, and consideration on social impacts. |
2 Biotopes | Demanded research on plants and animals with capacity for filtration, consideration on program and landscape composition. |
3 Canals | Demanded intensive design work to define shape, scale, interfaces; resulted in opportunities for many design solutions and a wide range of interaction with water. |
4 Detention ponds | Demanded research on materials and structure of detention pond, and consideration on program. |
5 Wet/dry islands | A small solution for rain events to accumulate stormwater creating leisure spaces and helping with evaporation; it has not been detailed due to time constraints. |
6 Infiltration zones | It is included in the areas where the designers have planned parks and recreational zones. |
Table 6.
Group 2 strategies. Source: Authors.
Table 6.
Group 2 strategies. Source: Authors.
WSD Strategy * | Students Approaches |
---|
4 Detention ponds | Demanded the redesign of waterfront, and consideration on social aspects; these ponds are the result of vertical changes of the landscape. |
6 Infiltration zones (bio-swale) | Demanded an understanding of issues when creating new landscapes; most of the urban plan has a topography that performs as the infiltration zone. |
7 Rainwater harvesting system | Demanded building redesign to incorporate tanks, and technical research. |
8 Water treatment facility | Demanded an extensive understanding of surfaces, scale, ground, borders, continuity; as result a massive filtration system is proposed. |
Table 7.
Group 3 strategies. Source: Authors.
Table 7.
Group 3 strategies. Source: Authors.
WSD Strategy * | Students Approaches |
---|
3 Canals | Demanded design work and landscape composition; the design is integrated into the buildings at a small scale. |
4 Detention ponds | Demanded the redesign of waterfront and intensive design work on composition, shape, scale; a system of ponds in different sizes and various levels of interaction between people and water. |
6 Infiltration zones (bio-swale) | Demanded an understanding of passive WSD strategies, and considerations on social aspects and landscape; the green patch suggests the potential for other WSD strategies. |
9 Green roofs | Demanded research on technical aspects and plants; integration of the skywalks system and entertainment spaces. |
Table 8.
Qualitative assessment of impacts and potentialities of adopted WSD strategies observed in the development of Blue Architecture design studio regarding its capacity to generate sustainable spaces (based on the assessment of the designs and implications for a real project). Source: Authors.
Table 8.
Qualitative assessment of impacts and potentialities of adopted WSD strategies observed in the development of Blue Architecture design studio regarding its capacity to generate sustainable spaces (based on the assessment of the designs and implications for a real project). Source: Authors.
WSD Strategy * | Students’ Group | Impact in the: | Potential |
---|
Design Process | Project |
---|
1 Floating residues filtration | 1 | High | Medium | This solution is limited to proximity to river or lake to allow continuous flow of water. Just one group realized the need of such strategy in the site context, which is applicable in such urban plan. |
2 Biotopes | 1 | High | High | This ecological strategy can create new landscapes for urban spaces, however, the selection of plants must follow smart criteria to reduce maintenance. This groups researched adequate plants to perform different eco-functions. |
3 Canals | 1 | High | High | Artificial canals can be quite expensive to be implemented, however, it can be a smart solution for dense urban contexts in providing water collection spaces and artificial landscapes. |
3 | Medium | Low |
4 Detention ponds | 1 | Medium | Low | The detention ponds are used in all three masterplans. This strategy provides flexibility of urban spaces being flooded mainly in heavy rain events. This strategy has a big potential to generate urban spaces and landscapes. |
2 | High | Medium |
3 | High | High |
5 Wet/dry islands | 1 | Medium | Low | Similar to detention ponds, the wet/dry islands will accumulate stormwater, but evaporation is the active principle instead of infiltration. This is one of the strategies that can enhance public spaces in cities. |
6 Infiltration zones (bio-swales) | 1 | Low | Low | Infiltration zones are also used in all three masterplans. These green patches are helpful to reduce stormwater surface runoff, essential in a flat site. |
2 | Low | Medium |
3 | Low | Low |
7 Rainwater harvesting system | 2 | Medium | Low | This solution can be implemented in small or big buildings and it can be connected to roof surfaces. |
8 Water treatment facility | 2 | Low | High | As strategy, it depends on government planning and infrastructure. |
9 Green roofs | 3 | Medium | High | Architects are quite familiar with this strategy, and the technologies have advanced to secure the building watertightness. |