The National Aquarium in Baltimore has opened the National Aquarium Harbor Wetland, a 10,000-sf floating wetland that mimics the Inner Harbor’s original Chesapeake Bay tidal marsh habitat. Located between Piers 3 and 4 on Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, the $14 million project features more than 32,000 native shrubs and marsh grasses.
With Ayers Saint Gross as the architect of record and Whiting-Turner as the construction contractor, the project is based on sustainable innovations developed by the Aquarium’s conservation and exhibit fabrication teams. At the project’s start about a decade ago, Studio Gang participated as the original concept architects.
“Harbor Wetland is the culmination of 12 years of research, innovation, and determination,” Aquarium president and CEO John Racanelli said in a press statement.
Ayers Saint Gross worked with the National Aquarium to design a sustainable, high-performing floating wetland intended to restore natural habitats and improve biodiversity and water quality. The project aims to reverse years of environmental degradation while creating a renewed, thriving ecosystem. The design features layered topography, with planting surfaces at tiered elevations to promote a variety of microhabitats and attract a greater diversity of species to the area.
Free and open to the public, the constructed wetland serves as a floating classroom for the community. Interpretive signage allows guests to learn about the wetland, the species drawn to it, seasonal changes, and the surrounding harbor.
Featuring docks, walkways, and shade cover, the habitat is composed of recycled plastic matting planted with native tidal wetland shrubs and grasses, whose roots will grow down into the water. This provides microhabitats for native species while drawing nutrients and contaminants from the water. Coated with a UV protectant for durability, the matting is fixed to a system of air-regulated pontoons that allow for adjustable buoyancy of the wetland, offsetting weight gain from growing biomass.
Compressed air is pumped into the channel to circulate water through the wetland’s shallow channel. Bubbles from the compressed air release oxygen into the water—benefiting aquatic species and keeping water moving through the wetland as it would during tidal changes in a natural tidal marsh.
“We hear so much negative talk about Inner Harbor water quality, but there is life in this water and there always has been,” Jack Cover, the Aquarium’s general curator, said in the statement. “My hope is that when people see the life this wetland attracts, from tiny microorganisms to fishes, crabs, water birds, and even small mammals like muskrats and otters—all of which we’re already seeing here—they might reconsider our local waterways and perhaps even take better care of our natural surroundings.”
Related Stories
| Oct 12, 2011
Consigli Construction breaks ground for Bigelow Laboratory Center for Ocean Health
Consigli to build third phase of 64-acre Ocean Science and Education Campus, design by WBRC Architects , engineers in association with Perkins + Will
| Sep 30, 2011
BBS Architects & Engineers completes welcoming center at St. Charles Resurrection Cemetery
The new structure serves as the cemetery's focal architectural point and center of operations.
| Sep 14, 2011
Lend Lease’s role in 9/11 Memorial & Museum
Lend Lease is honored to be the general contractor for the National September 11 Memorial & Museum project at the World Trade Center site in New York City.
| Sep 12, 2011
Living Buildings: Are AEC Firms up to the Challenge?
Modular Architecture > You’ve done a LEED Gold or two, maybe even a LEED Platinum. But are you and your firm ready to take on the Living Building Challenge? Think twice before you say yes.
| May 25, 2011
Olympic site spurs green building movement in UK
London's environmentally friendly 2012 Olympic venues are fuelling a green building movement in Britain.
| May 18, 2011
Improvements add to Detroit convention center’s appeal
Interior and exterior renovations and updates will make the Detroit Cobo Center more appealing to conventioneers. A new 40,000-sf ballroom will take advantage of the center’s riverfront location, with views of the river and downtown.
| May 18, 2011
Carnegie Hall vaults into the 21st century with a $200 million renovation
Historic Carnegie Hall in New York City is in the midst of a major $200 million renovation that will bring the building up to contemporary standards, increase educational and backstage space, and target LEED Silver.
| Apr 13, 2011
Southern Illinois park pavilion earns LEED Platinum
Erin’s Pavilion, a welcome and visitors center at the 80-acre Edwin Watts Southwind Park in Springfield, Ill., earned LEED Platinum. The new 16,000-sf facility, a joint project between local firm Walton and Associates Architects and the sustainability consulting firm Vertegy, based in St. Louis, serves as a community center and special needs education center, and is named for Erin Elzea, who struggled with disabilities during her life.
| Apr 13, 2011
Expanded Museum of the Moving Image provides a treat for the eyes
The expansion and renovation of the Museum of the Moving Image in the Astoria section of Queens, N.Y., involved a complete redesign of its first floor and the construction of a three-story 47,000-sf addition.