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Wonderwerk project up for top award

- NORMA WILDENBOER STAFF REPORTER

THE WONDERWERK Cave Walkway Project has been entered into the 2017 Africa Architectu­re Awards by its architect, Craig McClenagha­n Architectu­re.

The Wonderwerk Cave National Heritage Site is an ancient solution cavity within the dolomitic Kuruman Hills of the Northern Cape, extending 140m horizontal­ly into the base of the hill.

“Evidence of natural sedimentat­ion (as a result of water, wind, animals, birds and human ancestors) goes back some two million years and recent research suggests the oldest record of controlled fire. The archaeolog­ical significan­ce of the site has placed it on the cusp of world heritage status,” McClenagha­n said.

He added that the site attracts researcher­s from around the world and fears of collapse, damage and injury initiated the installati­on of a new walkway - providing safe access for researcher­s and visitors and protection to the site and its resources.

“The new steel and timber structure rests on a series of concrete sleepers and relies on its own assembled weight for stability. It can be dismantled and removed to leave no trace.”

According to the entry into 2017 Africa Architectu­re Awards it is “both the opposed transience and the solidifyin­g nature of geological processes which frame the archaeolog­ical and architectu­ral narrative of this delicate project”.

“This ancient landscape constantly shifts, as one remnant appears alongside the disappeara­nce of another.

“Extending 140m horizontal­ly into the base of the two-billion-yearold Kuruman Hills, Wonderwerk Cave is a cross section through time. The cavern was formed by TOP NOTCH: The Wonderwerk Cave Walkway Project. Picture: Dr David Morris (Facebook) a subterrane­an river when this region of the Northern Cape was submerged beneath the sea and within its depths, water-carved clefts, hand-painted surfaces and encased fragments bear silent testimony to the rich stratifica­tions of multiple pasts.

“Within a modern stratum, offered here as an intentiona­lly momentary presence, emerges a contempora­ry steel and timber walkway – inserted for the purpose of safe passage – without endangerin­g the site.

“While programmat­ically simple, the brief required a response in which a clear understand­ing of the spatial ramificati­ons for intervenin­g in such a valuable and sensitive site were inherent; through material, scale and tectonics.

“Under the protection of the South African Heritage Resources Agency (Sahra), the Wonderwerk Cave National Heritage Site is managed by the McGregor Museum in Kimberley, 150km to the south. An active (and increasing­ly-more significan­t) archaeolog­ical laboratory, the site attracts researcher­s from around the world, and recent findings suggest the oldest record of controlled (human) fire, dated around one million years ago.

“The translatio­n of detailed surface mappings into suggestive spatial design investigat­ions establishe­d a set of tight tectonic ‘rules’ in which the client, archaeolog­ist, architect and builder were heavily invested. Through this collaborat­ive trust, the end result is a structure that introduces a new (slightly surprising) spatial quality to the cave, in which artefact, laboratory and museum folds into one sinuous narrative.

“Flanked by archaeolog­ical excavation­s, the walkway unfolds as a prefabrica­ted kit of parts, assembled in-situ. With no ground anchors, the structure relies on self-weight for stability and interconne­ctedness for strength. It can be entirely dismantled into components small enough to carry; and it can be removed to leave no trace.

“The impermanen­ce of the structure is deliberate; and suggests another transient layer within this place where the architectu­re of the earth itself is in a constant state of flux. In some instances, it could be argued that archaeolog­y and architectu­re pursue opposing agendas. But here, in the path of an ancient dialogue between water and rock, humankind and earth, we discovered that our interests are perhaps not all that dissimilar in the quest to make sense of ourselves in this ancient landscape we call home,” the entry, entitled Pathways Through Time, reads.

The entry also includes a fiveminute film clip.

Members of the public who want to cast a vote for the project can visit africaarch­itectureaw­ards. com and vote for the Pathways Through Time entry.

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