An Audience with Nature

Kevin Kelly Architects and Stand are pleased to be able to share that our design for tree 2, ‘nature’s architecture and biomimicry’ has been shortlisted as part of the high profile competition to design a series of treehouses for RBG Kew.

Appearing translucent from afar, and curious in form, the event begins as visitors are drawn near. Upon closer inspection a woven fabric emerges, revealing activity within. There are people inside, milling around and sitting in individual pods, like seeds in a pine cone. All gathered in an undulating fabric, facing a large black pine tree.

A clearing in the woven timber invites you to step inside a wooden amphitheatre with two tiers of seating. The stage is set and nature is performing. You take your place and recline backwards into your pod. Gazing up into the canopy of the large black pine you realise you haven’t spent much time looking upwards. The leaves blow in the wind and suddenly sound and vision connect. The gentle, natural swaying hypnotises you. The show begins.

Using principles borrowed from nature, our treehouse is an inhabitable amphitheatre. Mimicking pine cones, the structural strength of the pods comes from their shape and their arrangement as a cluster. Organised over two tiers, for those who want to keep their feet on the ground or the climbers amongst us. It is a space to sit down and look up, to witness the greatest designer of them all, nature.

The responses to the brief were incredibly varied and there were many that I would have loved to see realised.

I am, however, thrilled with the chosen shortlist and I can’t wait to see how the architects develop their ideas.
— MoA founder Melissa Woolford
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RBG Kew Treehouse - Competition Win