Top Picks
-
Serpentine Gallery Pavilion 2012 designed by Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei
Vimeo 1y ago
-
US to hold direct peace talks with Taliban
Top Picks 20m ago
-
Protests continue to rock Brazil
Top Picks 23m ago
-
Paris Jackson testifies
Top Picks 1h ago
-
Turkey standoff as silent protests sweep the country
Top Picks 2h ago
-
Raw: Massive Protests Fill Brazilian Streets
Top Picks 2h ago
-
The 1860s Bar
Top Picks 8h ago
-
Inside Jaws, A Filmumentary by @jamieswb (2013)
Top Picks 11h ago
-
Kilian Martin: India within
Top Picks 13h ago
-
The World Must Stand Together
Top Picks 16h ago
-
Salinger Official Trailer 1 (2013) - Documentary HD
Top Picks 17h ago
-
Thwarted terror plot details revealed
Top Picks 22h ago
-
Turkey silent protest is followed by more arrests
Top Picks 23h ago
-
Tasmanian woman Leanne Rowe wakes from car crash with rare Foreign Accent Syndrome ABC News Austra
Top Picks 23h ago
-
Brazil protests: Demonstrators set fire to cars and destroy buildings in Rio, Brasilia and Sao Paulo
Top Picks 1d ago
-
Sukhoi Shows Off Jet Fighter at Paris Air Show
Top Picks 1d ago
Tags
Description
The Serpentine Gallery is proud to announce that Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei will create the 2012 Serpentine Gallery Pavilion. It will be the twelfth commission in the Gallery's annual series, the world's first and most ambitious architectural programme of its kind. The design team responsible for the celebrated Beijing National Stadium, which was built for the 2008 Olympic Games, comes together again in London in 2012 for the Serpentine's acclaimed annual commission, being presented as part of the London 2012 Festival, the culmination of the Cultural Olympiad. The Pavilion is Herzog & de Meuron and Ai Weiwei's first collaborative built structure in the UK. This year's Pavilion will take visitors beneath the Serpentine's lawn to explore the hidden history of its previous Pavilions. Eleven columns characterising each past Pavilion and a twelfth column representing the current structure will support a floating platform roof 1.4 metres above ground. The Pavilion's interior will be clad in cork, a sustainable building material chosen for its unique qualities and to echo the excavated earth. Taking an archaeological approach, the architects have created a design that will inspire visitors to look beneath the surface of the park as well as back in time across the ghosts of the earlier structures.
