The Foreign and Commonwealth Office revealed updated
designs for the UK pavilion that will represent this country
at Shanghai Expo 2010, designed by Thomas Heatherwick.
The pavilion is a six storey high object formed from some
60,000 slender transparent rods, which will extend from
the structure and quiver in the breeze. During the day,
each of these 7.5m long rods will act like fibre optic
filaments, drawing on daylight to illuminate the interior,
thereby creating a contemplative awe-inspiring space. At
night, light sources at the interior end of each rod will
allow the whole structure to glow. The pavilion will sit on a
landscape looking like paper that once wrapped the
building and that now lies unfolded on the site. The
landscape provides an open space for public events and
shelter for visitors making their way into the pavilion
structure.
Inside the pavilion building is a unique visual
representation of the UK’s leading role in conservation
worldwide – Kew’s Millennium Seed Bank partnership - the
largest collection of wild plant seeds in the world. By
encasing tens of thousands of seeds into the ends of the
transparent rods, visitors will be able to view examples of
seeds of plant species that contribute to national and
global conservation programmes.
Visitors will access the ‘Seed Cathedral’ by a series of
walkways, the content of which will depict the role of
nature in UK cities in the past, present and in the future.
This design is already coming to life. Construction was
formally started in March on China’s annual national tree
planting day; the UK being one of the first self-build
countries to start work on site. Heatherwick Studio is
acting in partnership with Mace, the consultancy and
construction company, to build the structure.
Thomas Heatherwick, articulating his vision for the
pavilion, said:
“The Expo in Shanghai will be an amazing event; around
two hundred countries competing for the attention of
seventy million visitors. Our task is to make the UK
pavilion stand out. We decided to do this by making one
extraordinary object; not recognisable in conventional
terms, set in a calm open site. Each visitor will be able to
explore both in their own way. Rather than making a
straightforward advert for the UK, we want our pavilion to
give each person a more profound understanding of the
richness of contemporary UK culture.”
Heatherwick’s Pavilion at Shanghai Expo 2010
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- Elena Sommariva
- 02 July 2009