According to a designer of the aquarium, the secret of a good aquarium design is not entirely in size, but in storytelling. We look for stories that can gather various animals and place them in a larger experience.
The aquarium is like a movie, a piece of music, or a book-let your heart move with the scene. When you separate, you feel as if you have experienced a clear journey. Since then, various parts of the United States, as well as Italy, Portugal, and Japan have assisted in the construction of a number of public facilities.
The primary focus is fish from beginning to end. But in terms of the visitor experience, the design process has to revolve around how-and where-the tourist encounters fish. Most aquariums are constructed in a linear manner, that is, tourists rarely deviate from the established tourist path.
Take the beauty of jellyfish or the miracle of penguins-these are spectacular in their own right. What we try to do is to enhance this experience by setting up encounters, or passing them, or seeing them swimming above and below you or at different heights.
A key element in the design is what he called the exclamation coefficient. This seems to be an appropriate way to depict the 2.6 million-gallon aquarium viewing gallery in the Dubai Mall-a project that Hampton has participated in. On the 157-foot-long trail, visitors have a 270-degree view. Come and watch the fish in the surrounding waters.
Whether passing through rocks or artificial corals, the creation of a simulated natural environment is the center of the art of aquarium design. Isolation from sunlight is also an important point, because sunlight can produce algae and unwanted reflections. These thinking elements not only provide a more ideal habitat for marine life, but also encourage people to enter a very important state of trusting the truth.