Item
Parc de la Distance
Title (Dublin Core)
Parc de la Distance
Description (Dublin Core)
Tom Ravenscroft for Dezeen: "Austria-based studio Precht has designed a maze-like park divided by high hedges that would allow people to be outdoors while maintaining social distance during the coronavirus pandemic.
The park would have numerous routes divided by 90-centimetre-wide hedges to maintain a safe physical distance between its visitors. Arranging the paths in a finger print-shaped swirl pattern creates many routes that can be used simultaneously.
Each of the red-granite gravel paths through the park would be around 600 metres long and circulate visitors from the edge of the park to the centre, where fountains would be located, and back round.
Gates on the entrances and exits to each of the routes, which would take around 20 minutes to walk, would indicate if a route is occupied.
The park is proposed for a vacant plot in Vienna, where the famous Schönbrunn and Belvedere parks are currently closed."
The park would have numerous routes divided by 90-centimetre-wide hedges to maintain a safe physical distance between its visitors. Arranging the paths in a finger print-shaped swirl pattern creates many routes that can be used simultaneously.
Each of the red-granite gravel paths through the park would be around 600 metres long and circulate visitors from the edge of the park to the centre, where fountains would be located, and back round.
Gates on the entrances and exits to each of the routes, which would take around 20 minutes to walk, would indicate if a route is occupied.
The park is proposed for a vacant plot in Vienna, where the famous Schönbrunn and Belvedere parks are currently closed."
Date (Dublin Core)
Creator (Dublin Core)
Contributor (Dublin Core)
Type (Dublin Core)
digital rendering
Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)
Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)
Date Submitted (Dublin Core)
04/20/2020
Date Modified (Dublin Core)
04/24/2020
10/19/2020
Accrual Method (Dublin Core)
1888