WORMHOLE – The Swampgate: A Bunker for Ecological Survival in Birmingham's WetlandsWORMHOLE – The Swampgate: A Bunker for Ecological Survival in Birmingham's Wetlands

WORMHOLE – The Swampgate: A Bunker for Ecological Survival in Birmingham's Wetlands

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What if the entrance to a better future looked like a descent into the earth? WORMHOLE – The Swampgate takes the architectural trope of the bunker, a symbol of civilizational collapse, and recasts it as a space of ecological learning and regeneration. Located in the wetlands east of the River Tame near Birmingham, the project operates on a provocative dual register: visitors can walk above ground through permaculture gardens and light installations, or plunge underground into a seed vault and water purification laboratory that confronts them with humanity's environmental failures. The result is less a visitor center and more a spatial argument about survival.

Designed by Anja Nedeljkovic and selected as an Editor's Choice entry for the Wetland Interpretation Center (WIC) competition, the project draws explicit parallels to the Svalbard Seed Vault and the UK's 2010 Seed Cathedral Pavilion. Its ambition is broad: a speculative prototype for climate-resilient architecture that treats wetlands not as marginal landscapes but as essential infrastructure for filtering water, supporting biodiversity, and regulating climate at a planetary scale.

A Ribbed Tunnel as Threshold Between Dystopia and Possibility

Interior view of a circular tunnel with ribbed walls and a silhouetted figure walking toward the exit
Interior view of a circular tunnel with ribbed walls and a silhouetted figure walking toward the exit

The interior of the "wormhole" itself is the project's most arresting spatial proposition. A circular tunnel with pronounced ribbed walls draws a solitary figure toward a luminous exit, collapsing the distance between the familiar and the unfamiliar. The form is described as bridging ecological time and space, a metaphorical passage that channels visitors from one state of awareness to another. The ribbing is structural but also deeply atmospheric, evoking the cross-section of a seed pod or the gut of some vast organism. It is architecture performing its narrative role without signage or explanation.

Multilevel Labs and Natural Water Filtration Below the Wetland Surface

Section drawing showing multilevel laboratory platforms with water collection equipment and blue accent lighting
Section drawing showing multilevel laboratory platforms with water collection equipment and blue accent lighting
Section drawing of a circular tunnel facility with labeled detail callouts showing water systems and equipment
Section drawing of a circular tunnel facility with labeled detail callouts showing water systems and equipment

The sectional drawings reveal the true complexity of the underground programme. Multilevel laboratory platforms are stacked within the subterranean chambers, equipped with water collection systems that exploit natural wetland sedimentation and filtration methods. Blue accent lighting reinforces the aquatic character of these spaces, making the presence of water feel constant and immersive. The circular tunnel facility appears in cross-section with labeled callouts detailing water systems and mechanical equipment, showing how the building is less a container and more a machine for processing the landscape's own hydrology.

This is where the doomsday architecture framing becomes genuinely productive. The underground level (Level -1) doesn't merely symbolize collapse; it houses functional infrastructure for water purification, seed banking, and climate adaptation research. The design insists that confronting worst-case scenarios is not nihilism but preparation.

Education Chambers and Research Workstations Carved into the Earth

Section drawing of the education chamber with tiered platforms and figures viewing experimental water filtration equipment
Section drawing of the education chamber with tiered platforms and figures viewing experimental water filtration equipment
Section drawing of the laboratory chamber with annotated detail vignettes showing workstations and research equipment
Section drawing of the laboratory chamber with annotated detail vignettes showing workstations and research equipment

Two further sectional drawings unpack the educational and research programmes embedded within the facility. One shows an education chamber with tiered platforms where figures observe experimental water filtration equipment, recalling the spatial logic of a lecture theatre turned inside out. The other details the laboratory chamber with annotated vignettes of individual workstations and research equipment. Both drawings are dense with information, demonstrating a careful integration of programmatic function and experiential narrative.

The programmatic mix is deliberately eclectic: water purification labs sit alongside a seed bank, permaculture pathways, and a café that serves tea brewed from purified wetland water and locally cultivated plants. That last detail is the kind of closed-loop thinking that elevates the project from speculative concept to demonstrable system. Visitors don't just observe ecological processes; they drink them.

An Undulating Glass Roof That Dissolves into the Wetland Horizon

Exterior view of the undulating glass roof structure beside a wetland with bare trees and birds
Exterior view of the undulating glass roof structure beside a wetland with bare trees and birds

At ground level, the architecture takes a radically different tone. An undulating glass roof structure sits low beside the wetland, its organic curves derived from satellite imagery and topographical mapping of the site. Bare trees and wading birds populate the foreground, and the building appears almost reluctant to announce itself, preferring to register as another contour in the landscape. This is the Ground Level (Level 0) experience: panoramic views of light installations, permaculture gardens, and natural habitats representing the hope of climate restoration. The contrast with the bunker-like intensity below is deliberate and effective.

Why This Project Matters

WORMHOLE – The Swampgate succeeds because it refuses to separate the poetic from the operational. The tunnel is a powerful piece of atmospheric design, but it leads somewhere functional: labs, seed vaults, purification systems. The dual-path visitor experience, splitting between above-ground optimism and underground reckoning, is a spatial strategy that forces engagement rather than passive consumption. Too many ecological buildings settle for green roofs and timber cladding; this one insists on confrontation.

Nedeljkovic's work also points to a critical shift in how we value wetland landscapes. By placing a seed vault and research facility within a wetland, the project reframes these ecosystems as active participants in climate resilience rather than picturesque backdrops. The architecture serves the ecology, not the other way around. As the pressures of climate adaptation intensify, this kind of thinking, grounded in real systems and speculative courage in equal measure, will be essential.



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About the Designers

Designer: Anja Nedeljkovic

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Project credits: WORMHOLE – The Swampgate by Anja Nedeljkovic WIC (uni.xyz).

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