GOA crafts an open-air theater in china where birds and humans share the same stage

GOA embeds open-air venue for humans and birds in China

 

GOA (Group of Architects) completes the Earth Valley Theater in Yixing, Jiangsu, China, a rare performance venue conceived as a shared system for birds and people. Built for Dancing with the Birds, a Sino-French ecological narrative show directed by Fan Yue, the 9,200-square-meter open-air theater sinks into a valley at the edge of Yaohu Town and treats architecture, landscape, avian behavior, and performance as a single intertwined project. ‘The Earth Valley Theater is an adventure of humans, nature, and the mind,’ says lead architect Xu Qi. ‘Space is no longer a shelter, but a question: how far are we from nature, and how close are we to ourselves?’

 

Materiality carries symbolic weight in Yixing, a region known for its pottery and situated near dense bamboo forests. GOA translated these two local elements, clay and bamboo, into contemporary, weather-resistant architectural forms. For the ‘clay’ volumes shaping the land-art geometry, carved concrete was CNC-processed to control its massing before craftsmen sculpted the surfaces by hand on site. ‘Bamboo’ appears in the central stage installation and in the aviaries’ facades. Instead of natural fiber, the team used high-density polyethylene to simulate woven bamboo textures, combining components in three tones to form softly mottled surfaces.

 

The sloped audience terrain hides a network of cast-in drainage channels that merge with the valley’s natural flood pathways. The sculpted ‘clay’ landforms contain cavities for acoustic equipment supporting the multimedia effects of the show. For efficiency and precision, the aviaries use prefabricated light-steel components combined from three standardized panel types.

all images © CHEN Xi Studio

 

 

Earth Valley Theater: architecture as land art

 

The design began with the topography of the site, a soft, branching valley that shaped the form of the theater long before any structure appeared. Instead of placing mass above ground, the Chinese architects at GOA let the building dissolve into the terrain, using the slopes as a natural container. A stepped plinth faces the road and concentrates the public program, creating a visual barrier between everyday life and the immersive environment beyond. Passing through one of three entrance halls, visitors leave the town behind and enter a space that functions almost as a constructed dreamscape for the performance.

 

Behind the plinth, the 2,000-seat auditorium opens toward the surrounding hills. The team aimed to use as much level ground as possible, allowing the edges of the theater to trace the land’s natural contours. Once the show begins, the hills, already part of the birds’ familiar environment, double as the theatrical backdrop. A second, perpendicular valley is given over to the aviaries, where quieter terrain creates a sheltered corridor from which flocks of white storks emerge at the climactic moment of the performance.

GOA completes the Earth Valley Theater in China

 

 

designing from the performers’ point of view

 

Because birds are the lead performers, Earth Valley Theater required a type of planning, unfamiliar to most theater architecture, that begins with flight paths, species-specific habits, and sensory thresholds. Avian consultants guided the process from the outset. Birds travel from their aviaries to ‘zero-level’ boxes above the auditorium before sweeping across the open space, sometimes gliding just above visitors’ heads. To achieve this, seating slopes and height differences were calibrated with precision, balancing immersion with safety and comfort for both species.

 

This bird-oriented design extended into the micro-scale. Dot stickers applied to glass prevent collisions. Thermally treated timber lines the aviaries to avoid paint toxicity while remaining durable outdoors. Ground gravel, mesh size, and enclosure partitions vary by species, reflecting differences in body size and behavior. 

 

The studio’s multidisciplinary team participated continuously from concept to fabrication, aligning technical systems with performance needs.

a rare performance venue conceived as a shared system for birds and people

built for a Sino-French ecological narrative show directed by Fan Yue

the 9,200-square-meter open-air theater sinks into a valley at the edge of Yaohu Town

architecture, landscape, avian behavior, and performance become a single intertwined project

the team used high-density polyethylene to simulate woven bamboo textures

GOA translates clay and bamboo into weather-resistant architectural forms

the sloped audience terrain hides a network of cast-in drainage channels

the ‘clay’ volumes shape the land-art geometry

craftsmen sculpted the surfaces by hand on site

GOA let the building dissolve into the terrain

creating a visual barrier between everyday life and the immersive environment beyond

visitors leave the town behind and enter a space that functions almost as a constructed dreamscape

carved concrete was CNC-processed to control its massing

 

 

project info:

 

name: The Earth Valley Theater

architects: GOA (Group of Architects) 

location: Yixing, Wuxi, Jiangsu Province, China

client: Jiangsu Mingling Yaohu Town Tourism Co., Ltd.

floor area: 9,200 square meters

 

director (dancing with the birds): Yueshang Studio

acoustic consultant: EZPro

environmental visual consultant: ToThree

aviary management: Puy du Fou

photographer: CHEN Xi Studio

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