We walk on a fluid terrain. Not defined by space or time, Wetness is a flowing entity that interacts and influences life through its hydrological cycle. Fluid Terrain embodies water into an architectural proposition through its drainage form and vernacular materialistic qualities.
The fluid terrain explored is Rostella Reserve in Dilston, a small town along the kanamaluka. The site is the start of a walking loop that meanders along the river bank. The park however, is undeveloped with boggy ground conditions and a fallen over bench seat a cry for a proposition that allows the community to gather and interact with the existing ecosystem. Fluid Terrain touches the earth lightly with the detailing of the three pavilions perched on the terrain. They commute, gather and engage, arranged along a pre-existing flow formation on site.