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Serpentine Pavilion

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Movementand flow

Movementand flow

The Serpentine Pavilion, designed by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), was an 'unzipped wall' that was transformed from straight line to three-dimensional space, creating a dramatic structure that by day housed a café and free family activities and by night became a space for the Serpentine's acclaimed Park Nights programme.

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BIG's Pavilion is created from pultruded fiberglass "bricks," which let in light and views to the interior of the pavilion through each wall.

The pavilion hosts a range of events throughout the summer, including a café and free family activities during the day and a space for the Serpentine's acclaimed Park Nights programme of performative works by artists, writers and musicians by night.

Viewed side-on, the pavilion is rectangular. But when seen from the front or at an angle, its curving silhouette is revealed. It also changes from opaque to see-through, depending on the viewing angle.

I repeated the same shape of a cube in order to create this pattern

By day, it functioned as a café and family activity centre, home to an 'unzipped wall' that was transformed from straight line to three-dimensional space.

In addition to the fiberglass frames and gaps between the switched boxes, the unzipped wall creates a cavelike canyon from the translucent resin and the fibreglass frames.

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