Renzo Piano’s holistic way of design thinking did not imprison his ability to create not only a sheltered environment but also a remarkable landscape that caters for various activities. Yet again, in the case of landscaping, the design ideas are prevailed by a great sense of reminiscence to the past without compromising the needs of the current and future users. Visual vistas are stirred up, with the use of either series of colonnades or lined trees and lead the viewer to different directions throughout the site. The natural topography of the site is also taken into consideration and employed; the slopes in the southern part of the peninsula are transformed into a natural amphitheatre able to provide outdoor entertainment for two thousand (2000) viewers. “The sight really does evoke some new vision of what architecture might be: a flowering forth from the local natural forms and forces, with deep roots in tribal tradition and opening up optimistically to the future.”[1]