The Wadden Sea Centre’s extension designed by Dorte Mandrup is located in the southern part of Jutland, in Wadden Sea of Denmark, one of the largest and newest national park and UNESCO appointed World Heritage site.

Around 12,000 years ago, the end of the ice age created a 500 km long coastal area it now call the Wadden Sea. The area has seen the tide come and go for millions of years, creating the unique marshlands.

Dorte Mandrup’s extension of the Wadden Sea Centre pays homage to the local craftsman tradition of the water reed cladding.
The centre designed by Dorte Mandrup was erected with thatched roofs and facades. The building hereby underlines the tactile qualities and robustness that can be found in  traditional crafts and materials of the region.

Completed in two phases, the Wadden Sea Center was initiated through an international competition to establish a new visitor center.

The project was carefully designed to be fully accessible. Access is through a wooden ramp that gives access to the main building through automatic doors. The complex is organized around a patio, displaying two more buildings (educational center and boat area) connected by a wooden ramp.
 
“The Wadden Sea is the largest unbroken system of intertidal sand and mud flats in the world. It is […] formed by the intricate interactions between physical and biological factors that have given rise to a multitude of transitional habitats. The area is home to numerous plant and animal species […] and is one of the last remaining large-scale, intertidal ecosystems where natural processes continue to function largely undisturbed. It is considered one of the most important areas for migratory birds in the world and is connected to a network of other key sites for migratory birds. Its importance is not only in the context of the East Atlantic Flyway but also in the critical role it plays in the conservation of African-Eurasian migratory waterbirds. In the Wadden Sea up to 6.1 million birds can be present at the same time, and an average of 10-12 million pass through it each year.” 
 

Wadden Sea Centre by Dorte Mandrup. Photograph by Adam Mørk.

Project description by Dorte Mandrup

The Wadden Sea Centre emerges out of the flat marshland on the coast near the Wadden Sea. In a synergy of nature, art, and architecture, it creates awareness of an important UNESCO-protected wetland and contributes to sustainable development in the area. The use of thatching reeds both re-actualizes a traditional local craft and a sustainable material.

The Wadden Sea Centre is located near the UNESCO-protected Wadden Sea - the world’s largest unbroken tidal system and home to 15 million migratory birds. It aims at creating a deeper understanding of the crucial natural habitat. The project is a partial transformation and extension to an existing, angled building from 1998. The extension embraces the existing and integrates the whole complex into the landscape – appearing like a thatched farm emerging as an island in the distance. The textual reeds are processed with long precision cuts to create eaves and intersections between diagonal and vertical surfaces. Reeds have been used since the Viking Age with an almost un-changed technique and here reinterpreted as a sustainable material. The tactility and materiality of the outside is deliberately changed to abstract space on the inside to let the narrative of the birds come to live

Completed through two phases, the Wadden Sea Centre was initiated through an international competition to establish a new visitor centre – not as a focal point but a beginning to the journey out into the landscape. This ambition has not been reached until the completion of the second phase in March 2021 with the boathouse finally establishing the starting point for this journey and a new installation completing the exhibition. The Wadden Sea Centre fosters a deep appreciation of all aspects of the surrounding context. By creating a destination in the landscape, it is creating awareness, knowledge and a deeper appreciated of our natural and cultural heritage. Since the opening, the number of visitors has increased by almost 400 percent, creating new jobs and opportunities in the local community. The design and programming have been carefully planned to make it accessible for all. With level access, automatic door, wooden ramps through the landscape, and the interior courtyard and playground designed with focus on people with disabilities. Small solar driven wheelchairs also allow people with disabilities to participate in the tours into the wetlands of the Wadden Sea.

Significantly reduced.
The construction mainly consists of lightweight wooden panels and locally harvested reeds. The 25.000 bundles of thatching reeds covering the building are used directly, without any processing other than drying. They are naturally impregnated by the salty air and the wind keeps them dry and free of fungus leaving little need for maintenance. To create a harmonious expression, both the existing building and the boathouse is clad with the European hardwood Robinia. Robinia is a very durable, sustainably grown material that helps to keep the building's environmental impact to a minimum and require no further maintenance. In combination with 3400 meter of geothermal heat and 120 solar panels hidden on the roof, materials, constructions, and carefully planned windows and skylights ensures a status as a passive house. The project was managed trough a turnkey contract in close dialogue between the architect and the client about the necessary decisions and prioritizes which has also ensured the project to be realized within a limited budget of 1600 €/m².

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Architects
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Dorte Mandrup.  Architect.- Dorte Mandrup-Poulsen.

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Collaborators
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JAC Studios.- Johan Carlsson. Anders Christensen ApS.- Anders Christensen. Steensen&Warming.- Andreas Mølsted Marianne. Levinsen Landscape.- Marianne Levinsen. Fortheloveoflight.- Nikolaj Birkelund. Roofer.- Kim Andersen. Exhibition artist.- Jason Bruges.
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Client
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Esbjerg Kommune.
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Area
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Total area.- 24,300 m².
Usable floor area.- 2,800 m².
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Dates
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Year began.- 2015.
Completed, 2017 (phase 1) & 2021 (phase 2).
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Cost
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1600 €/m².
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Location Localización
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Okholmvej 5, 6760 Ribe, Denmark. LatLng: (55.2957107, 8.6688181).
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Photography
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Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter is founded in 1999 by Dorte Mandrup. Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter engages in a wide variety of projects; cultural institutions, buildings for children and youth, sports facilities, schools, housing, master plans and office buildings, as well as renovation and alteration of Federally Listed historical buildings.

The visionary methods of Dorte Mandrup Arkitekter are based on thorough analysis of every parameter involved in the brief.

On this foundation, new materials, constructions and variation of space, are investigated. The office seeks to combine the tactile and poetic experience of space with conceptual clarity and accuracy, in both large scale schemes and in detail.

Dorte Mandrup has been awarded numerous national and international awards. Among those: Bauwelt Prize, AR Award for Emerging Architecture – and the prestigious C.F. Hansen medal.

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