Back to Projects

Bee Breeders Iceland Black Lava Fields Visitor Center

The Iceland Black Lava Fields Visitor Center greets approximately 500,000 visitors each year. These visitors come from all over to get an up-close and personal look at Dimmmuborgir’s natural lava-formed towers and castles along a winding path flanked with native foliage. The visitors center required considerable upgrades, including a new facility to replace the container modules that served as the current visitors center and relocating parking to accommodate traffic.

Cline Design was challenged to imagine a new visitors’ experience that would capture incredible views, provide a safer, more efficient traffic flow, and offer a facility that could withstand dramatic weather changes.

The proposed program is comprised of three components, the visitor’s area, staff area, and parking. The visitor’s area boasts an information center in the form of a small exhibition room, a café, terrace, childrens’ playground, restrooms, and shower. The staff area provides workers with a small kitchen, office, storage, and restrooms. The new parking area allows for 100 cars, 20 buses, and 10 campers.

The team first tackled the arrival, analyzing ways to balance parking and pedestrians, while creating a connection to the fields both visually and physically. Their proposed solution provides four pedestrian trails from parking that converge into one.

The team then examined the client’s programmatic needs and their ability to enhance the experience, introducing visitors to program pieces along the trail rather than all-at-once. From the convergence after parking, the team created an entry portal that greets visitors and prepares them for their journey. The next 50 meters leads them to an exhibition space followed by Hverfjall lookout, a space for reflection and capturing sweeping views of the natural wonder. After 250 meters along their journey, the visitor meets the 2-story visitor shelter carved into the topography to embrace the landscape’s naturalness and provide unobstructed views giving a sense of oneness with the fields. The space, shrouded in glass, includes an indoor café and second-story lookout. Visitors exiting the shelter are connected to the existing trails and can choose their path through the lava fields.

The result of the Black Lava Fields reimagination calls for personal exploration, starting at the surface and descending to the base of the lava formations, weaving your way through each of the areas in-between. There is a uniqueness in every inch of the journey to be contemplated, admired, and celebrated.

Date: 2019

Related Projects

Bee Breeders Kurgi Observation Tower
Latvia
The criteria you selected produced no results.