Serpentine Pavilion 2015

An amorphous structure made of a translucent, multi-coloured fabric membrane will be the 15th Serpentine Pavilion, commissioned to Madrid-based architects SelgasCano.

SelgasCano, Serpentine Pavilion 2015, indicative CGI © Steven Kevin Howson / SelgasCano
Serpentine reveals on March 25 designs for the 15th annual Pavilion.
The render by Madrid-based architects SelgasCano shows an amorphous, double-skinned, polygonal structure consisting of panels of a translucent, multi-coloured fabric membrane (ETFE) woven through and wrapped in webbing. Visitors will be able to enter and exit the Pavilion at a number of different points, passing through a ‘secret corridor’ between the outer and inner layer of the structure and into the Pavilion’s brilliant, stained glass-effect interior.
SelgasCano, Serpentine Pavilion 2015, indicative CGI © Steven Kevin Howson / SelgasCano
SelgasCano, Serpentine Pavilion 2015, indicative CGI © Steven Kevin Howson / SelgasCano
The architects describe their design: “When the Serpentine invited us to design the Pavilion, we began to think about what the structure needed to provide and what materials should be used in a Royal Park in London. These questions, mixed with our own architectural interests and the knowledge that the design needs to connect with nature and feel part of the landscape, provided us with a concept based on pure visitor experience. We sought a way to allow the public to experience architecture through simple elements: structure, light, transparency, shadows, lightness, form, sensitivity, change, surprise, colour and materials. We have therefore designed a Pavilion which incorporates all of these elements.
SelgasCano, Serpentine Pavilion 2015, indicative CGI © Steven Kevin Howson / SelgasCano
SelgasCano, Serpentine Pavilion 2015, indicative CGI © Steven Kevin Howson / SelgasCano
The spatial qualities of the Pavilion only unfold when accessing the structure and being immersed within it. Each entrance allows for a specific journey through the space, characterised by colour, light and irregular shapes with surprising volumes. This is accomplished by creating a double-layered shell, made of opaque and translucent fluorine-based plastic (ETFE) in a variety of colours. At the heart of the Pavilion is an open space for gathering as well as a café. We are also very much aware of the Pavilion’s anniversary in our design for the 15th annual commission. The structure therefore had to be – without resembling previous Pavilions – a tribute to them all and a homage to all the stories told within those designs.”
Portrait courtesy of the architects
SelgasCano. Courtesy of the architects

Serpentine Pavilion 2015, London
Program: pavilion
Architects: SelgasCano
Client: Serpentine Galleries
Headline Sponsor: Goldman Sachs
Engineering and technical design services: AECOM, in collaboration with David Glover

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