venice architecture biennale 2025 | architecture news and projects https://www.designboom.com/tag/venice-architecture-biennale-2025/ designboom magazine | your first source for architecture, design & art news Thu, 12 Jun 2025 15:24:55 +0000 en-US hourly 1 3D printed biostructures with live bacteria capture carbon dioxide from air at venice biennale https://www.designboom.com/architecture/3d-printed-biostructures-live-cyanobacteria-capture-carbon-dioxide-air-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-canada-pavilion-interview-06-13-2025/ Thu, 12 Jun 2025 23:30:31 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1138671 designboom speaks with living room collective’s lead and biodesigner andrea shin ling about the exhibition shown inside the canada pavilion.

The post 3D printed biostructures with live bacteria capture carbon dioxide from air at venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
3D printed biostructures with live cyanobacteria in venice

 

Living Room Collective uses live cyanobacteria within 3D printed biostructures to capture carbon dioxide from air in the Canada Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025. Named Picoplanktonics, the exhibition commissioned by The Canada Council for the Arts is on view from May 10th to November 26th, 2025. designboom speaks with Living Room Collective’s lead and biodesigner Andrea Shin Ling about the project. In our interview, she says that architecture often uses the term ‘regenerative design’ when referring to circular or upcycled material systems. ‘In Picoplanktonics, we are talking about the biological definition of regeneration, which means the literal ability to regenerate or renew from damaged or dead parts,’ she tells designboom.

 

The research team has merged two ancient metabolic processes for Picoplanktonics: photosynthesis and biocementation. For the former, they turn to cyanobacteria, one of the oldest groups of bacterial organisms on the planet. ‘Cyanobacteria are among the first photosynthetic organisms and are believed to be responsible for the Great Oxygenation Event, where 2.4 billion years ago, the atmosphere transformed from a high CO2 environment to a high O2 environment because of photosynthesis,’ Andrea Shin Ling explains. They can also produce biocementation, or the process of capturing carbon dioxide from air and turning it into solid minerals, like carbonates. Because of this, the resulting minerals act like ‘cement’ and can store the carbon permanently, keeping it out of the atmosphere.

3D printed biostructures venice
all images courtesy of The Living Room Collective | photos by Valentina Mori, unless stated otherwise

 

 

Infusing the bacteria during the printing stage

 

Before bringing them to Venice, Andrea Shin Ling and the Living Room Collective fabricated the 3D printed biostructures at ETH Zürich’s laboratory. The biodesigner shares with us that when they make these structures, they already infuse the living cyanobacteria during the printing stage instead of later on. Then, they need to let the bacteria grow and take care of them so they can grow. This means they have to provide enough light, warmth, and humidity so that they can proliferate and slowly harden the prints.

 

‘The idea is that the bacteria cooperate in a human-initiated fabrication process and, with our care, can continue and finish that process (in this case, hardening the printed structures they live in),’ says Andrea Shin Ling. She adds that for the 3D printed biostructure with live cyanobacteria in Venice, favorable conditions mean warm sunlight, high humidity, and access to salt water. ‘These are conditions that are common in Venice and achievable in the Canada Pavilion, which informed our design process,’ the biodesigner explains to designboom.

3D printed biostructures venice
Living Room Collective uses live cyanobacteria within 3D printed biostructures to capture carbon dioxide from air

 

 

Microorganisms that can repair themselves to a healthy state

 

In Picoplanktonics, the Living Room Collective works with bacteria as the living component of their material system. It has the ability to grow and die within the 3D printed biostructures, as shown in Venice, and the colony can restore itself under favorable conditions after periods of decline. Andrea Shin Ling says, however, that the process isn’t necessarily consistent since it depends on the environmental conditions at a particular point in time.

 

‘So, for instance, a bioprint might dry out if the air is too dry that week, and many of the bacteria die. But because the system is regenerative, the bacteria population has the potential to restore itself when favorable conditions return and then continue their carbon sequestration work,’ she shares with designboom.

3D printed biostructures venice
these biostructures are inside the Canada Pavilion at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025

 

 

During their research process, the group has also had samples where the bacteria have gotten ‘sick’, worn out, or where they looked like they were over-oxidized. With some care, the live cyanobacteria were able to repair themselves back to a healthy state. This is what Andrea Shin Ling means when she describes regenerative design. It looks more into the potential of biological material systems that are dynamic and restorative.

 

‘But their responsivity can also create situations that we don’t want. So much of the project is then trying to understand what is causing these situations and monitoring conditions so that we can respond accordingly,’ the biodesigner adds. Visitors to the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025 can see the research process and progress of Picoplanktonics firsthand inside the Canada Pavilion. It remains on-site from May 10th to November 26th, 2025.

3D printed biostructures venice
the research group takes care of the bacteria throughout the exhibition to maintain their healthy state

3D printed biostructures venice
the bacteria need warm sunlight, high humidity, and access to salt water to thrive

3D printed biostructures venice
the research group already infuses the living cyanobacteria during the printing stage | image © designboom

living-room-collective-cyanobacteria-3D-printed-structures-canada-pavilion-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-interview-desigboom-ban

the bacteria harden the printed structures they live in | image © designboom

the research team has used ancient metabolic processes for Picoplanktonics | image © designboom
the research team has used ancient metabolic processes for Picoplanktonics | image © designboom

the cyanobacteria can also produce biocementation, or the process of capturing carbon dioxide from air
the cyanobacteria can also produce biocementation, or the process of capturing carbon dioxide from air

Living Room Collective’s lead And biodesigner Andrea Shin Ling
Living Room Collective’s lead And biodesigner Andrea Shin Ling

living-room-collective-cyanobacteria-3D-printed-structures-canada-pavilion-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-interview-desigboom-ban2

the exhibition is on view until November 26th, 2025

 

project info:

 

name: Picoplanktonics | @picoplanktonics

group: The Living Room Collective

team: Andrea Shin Ling Nicholas Hoban, Vincent Hui, Clayton Lee

commission by: The Canada Council for the Arts | @canada.council

event: Venice Architecture Biennale 2025 | @labiennale

location: Calle Giazzo, 30122 Venice, Italy

dates: May 10th to November 26th, 2025

research and development: Andrea Shin Ling, Yo-Cheng Jerry Lee, Nijat Mahamaliyev, Hamid Peiro, Dalia Dranseike, Yifan Cui, Pok Yin Victor Leung, Barrak Darweesh

photography: Valentina Mori | @_valentinamori_

 

production

eth zurich: Huang Su, Wenqian Yang, Che-Wei Lin, Sukhdevsinh Parmar; Tobias Hartmann, Michael Lyrenmann, Luca Petrus, Jonathan Leu, Philippe Fleischmann, Oliver Zgraggen, Paul Fischlin, Mario Hebing, Franklin Füchslin; Hao Wu, Nicola Piccioli-Cappelli, Roberto Innocenti, Sigurd Rinde, Börte Emiroglu, Stéphane Bernhard, Carlo Pasini, Apoorv Singh, Paul Jaeggi; Mario Guala, Isabella Longoni;

 

toronto metropolitan university: Venessa Chan, Minh Ton, Daniel Wolinski, Marko Jovanovic, Santino D’Angelo Rozas, Rachel Kim, Alexandra Waxman, Richard McCulloch, Stephen Waldman, Tina Smith, Andrea Skyers, Randy Ragan, Emma Grant, Shira Gellman, Mariska Espinet, Suzanne Porter, Stacey Park, Amanda Wood, Lisa Landrum, Dorothy Johns, Cedric Ortiz

 

university of toronto: Daniel Lewycky, Philipp Cop

 

visualisation: Adrian Yu, Nazanin Kazemi, Ariel Weiss

structural advisors: Andrea Menardo, Kam-Ming Mark Tam

graphic design: Shannon Lin

website: Sigurd Rinde, Shannon Lin

local project logistics: Tamara Andruszkiewicz

project advisors: ETH Zurich, Benjamin Dillenburger, Mark Tibbitt

 

support: Canada Council, Digital Building Technologies, Institute of Technology & Architecture, D-ARCH, ETH Zurich, Department of Architectural Science, Toronto Metropolitan University, John H. Daniels Faculty of Architecture, Landscape and Design, University of Toronto, Royal Architectural Institute of Canada; Advanced Engineering with Living Materials (ALIVE) Initiative, ETH Zurich; Additive Tectonics GmbH; ABB Switzerland; Vestacon Limited and NEUF Architect(e)s

The post 3D printed biostructures with live bacteria capture carbon dioxide from air at venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
site-specific installations by studio heech fuse korean pavilion with biennale’s giardini trees https://www.designboom.com/architecture/site-specific-installations-studio-heech-korean-pavilion-biennale-giardini-time-for-trees-06-11-2025/ Wed, 11 Jun 2025 04:05:47 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1137817 visitors engage with environmental patterns created by nearby trees.

The post site-specific installations by studio heech fuse korean pavilion with biennale’s giardini trees appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
installations by Studio Heech celebrate Korean Pavilion’s 30 years

 

Part of the Korean Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale, Time for Trees by Heechan Park + Studio Heech presents a series of spatial installations and sensing devices marking the pavilion’s 30th anniversary. The project explores the evolving relationship between the architecture of the Korean Pavilion and the surrounding trees within the Giardini della Biennale, framing this interaction through visual, auditory, and spatial means.

 

The installations, ‘A Shadow Caster,’ ‘Giardini Travelers,’ and ‘Elevated Gaze 1995,’ operate as observation tools, offering a framework to perceive how the pavilion coexists with its natural surroundings over time. Emphasizing the pavilion’s original integration into the site without displacing any trees, the project highlights the long-term coexistence of built form and landscape. Rather than treating architecture as separate from nature, the installation acknowledges both as equal components in the spatial composition of the Giardini. Developed through collaborations with various Korean workshops, the work reflects on the logistics and implications of constructing international exhibitions. It also addresses the broader conditions of biennale production, positioning the project as both site-responsive and globally connected. Unlike the closed typology of white cube exhibition spaces, the Korean Pavilion remains visually and spatially open to its surroundings. The installations within are designed to interact with environmental conditions such as light, shadow, and sound, reinforcing the role of time and place in the experience of architecture.


Time for Trees celebrates the Korean Pavilion’s 30 years | all images by Yongjoon Choi unless stated otherwise

 

 

Time for Trees showcases three site-specific spatial installations

 

‘A Shadow Caster’ is a site-specific spatial installation that allows visitors to read and experience the shadows cast by the trees around the Korean Pavilion. The work captures the patterns, shades, and subtle movements of the surrounding Giardini environment, evolving with time, seasons, and changing climate conditions. Visitors experience the relationship that the Korean Pavilion has with the vegetal and topographic conditions

 

Created by Studio Heech’s team in collaboration with a woodworking shop and a metal workshop in Seoul, the ‘Giardini Travelers’ are structural and modular architectural devices created for site-specific events and rituals at the Venice Biennale. Moving through various national pavilions of Giardini, they explore and celebrate the rich and intriguing histories connected to the surrounding trees and natural environment. These adaptable modular trusses can function as an observation deck, ladder, bench, seating area for visitors, stage for special events, or a setting for temporary exhibitions. In particular, in this exhibition, they are used as a ladder and bench, allowing visitors to experience the stories created through relationships with the surrounding trees. ‘Giardini Travelers’ remains an ‘artwork’ that, even in the 21st century, must be created on the other side of the globe and embark on a long journey to Venice. It serves as both a ritualistic tribute and a critical inquiry into the efforts and dedication of those who create national pavilions every year, as well as the long-standing history and traditions of the Biennale.

 

‘Elevated Gaze 1995’ is inspired by the quote ‘free independence of the human gaze, tied to the human face by a cord so loose, so long, so elastic that it can stray, alone, as far as it may choose,’ from Marcel Proust’s ‘In Search of Lost Time, Swann’s Way.’ In this passage, the human gaze moves freely and independently, experiencing its surroundings. Through this piece, visitors transcend the limits of their own gaze, rising higher to take in the landscape of the Giardini and the sounds of trees and forests. The long-standing story created by the equal symbiosis of architecture and trees in the Giardini is reinterpreted and shared with visitors through ‘Elevated Gaze 1995.’ The exhibition’s title, ‘Time for Trees,’ draws from Sufi Boise’s essay of the same title in Architectural Review (April 2023).


the project explores the relationship between architecture and surrounding trees in the Giardini

 


three key installations frame the dialogue between built form and landscape


‘A Shadow Caster’ captures the movement and seasonal changes of tree shadows


visitors engage with environmental patterns created by nearby trees

korean-pavilion-2025-venice-biennale-heechan-park-studio-heech-spatial-installations-time-for-trees-designboom-1800-2

light and shadow define a shifting spatial experience around the pavilion


the human gaze moves freely and independently, experiencing its surroundings


each installation interacts with sound, light, and time to frame natural processes


the project acknowledges the equal presence of nature and structure in the Giardini

korean-pavilion-2025-venice-biennale-heechan-park-studio-heech-spatial-installations-time-for-trees-designboom-1800-1

‘Giardini Travelers’ are modular structures built for observation and interaction

 

project info:

 

name: Time for Trees
architect: Heechan Park – Studio Heech | @studioheech

venue: Korean Pavilion, Giardini, Venice

dates: May 10th – November 23th, 2025

 

digital interaction collaborator: Yoosuk Kim (RGB lab)

fabrication coordinator: Il Park (Design Lab)

technical advisor: Junhyuk Park, Junghoon Kim (Archi Terre)

fabricator: KD-Art, Catharsis, RGB lab

project assistant: Yurim Kim (Studio Heech)

photographer: Yongjoon Choi, Yongbaek Lee

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom

The post site-specific installations by studio heech fuse korean pavilion with biennale’s giardini trees appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
MVRDV’s winy maas on kinetic sombra pavilion and biotopia installation at venice biennale https://www.designboom.com/architecture/mvrdv-winy-maas-kinetic-sombra-pavilion-biotopia-installation-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-interview-06-09-2025/ Mon, 09 Jun 2025 09:50:50 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1133961 before the exhibition’s public opening, the dutch architect explained the making and thinking behind the pavilion and the installation.

The post MVRDV’s winy maas on kinetic sombra pavilion and biotopia installation at venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
MVRDV’s winy maas at the venice architecture biennale 2025

 

MVRDV’s Winy Maas sits down with designboom to discuss the making of the kinetic Sombra Pavilion and the 3D printed Biotopia installation at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025. Before the exhibition’s public opening on May 9th 2025, the Dutch architect, and the M of MVRDV together with Jacob van Rijs and Nathalie de Vries, explained the making and thinking behind the SOMBRA pavilion and the Biotopia installation. ‘It’s nice that the pavilion is not solar. In this case, it’s only the air pressure. What we use is our knowledge of the sun. We work a lot on shadow and light, and create and research complex solar programs. For Biotopia, I imagine a fully recyclable, biological world that combines all the properties we need: energy, oxygen, animals, shelter, light, flexibility, and changeability,’ the architect tells designboom during the interview.

 

One project uses physics to create shade without electricity, while the other imagines a future where buildings grow like living organisms. The SOMBRA pavilion – designed by a team led by MVRDV founding partner Jacob van Rijs – is at the European Cultural Centre’s Giardini Marinaressa, part of the Time Space Existence show. The Biotopia installation is at the Arsenale, part of the main exhibition curated by Carlo Ratti. Both of them are on view until November 2025. For the pavilion, built in collaboration with with Metadecor, Airshade, and Alumet, the structure turns reused beams into large arches, supported by metal ribs. This frame holds triangular panels fitted with perforated metal screens. The pavilion operates without electricity or motors. It relies on physics: when direct sunlight heats small air canisters located within the structure’s ribs, the air pressure inside increases. This pressure inflates small airbags attached to the panels. As an airbag inflates, it contracts, pulling its corresponding panel closed to create shade. When the sun moves and the canisters cool, the pressure decreases, and the panels reopen.

MVRDV winy maas
portrait of Winy Maas | image © designboom

 

 

Progress to building a biotopic world

 

Heading to the Arsenale of the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025, Winy Maas and his think tank The Why Factory collaborate with visual artist Federico Díaz to sculpt and present BIOTOPIA. The installation is in two parts. First, the 3D printed sculpture made of polymer. The second is an accompanying film documenting the Dutch architect’s research and how he imagines biotopia will be, which brims with self-sustaining systems. The kind of future here makes biology the foundation for all design. It reimagines cities as forests and architecture as something that grows like a tree. The core concept is a global Sponge, or a type of dynamic biomatter architecture. This Sponge would perform functions like cooling the air, filtering water, and generating energy, all while adapting like a living thing.

 

The sculptural installation with Federico Díaz, called Propagative Structures, gives physical form to the idea of living matter, of architecture built from living organisms. The work emerges from research into biomimicry, or a field of design that takes inspiration from natural systems. The installation’s forms draw on the structure of mangrove root networks, a suggestion of a future where habitats are not built but cultivated like plants. In our interview with the architect, Winy Maas discusses the future of urbanism, our progress to a biotopic world, the use of computational designs and algorithms in architecture, and what lies ahead for MVRDV, to name a few.

MVRDV winy maas
all images courtesy of MVRDV | photos by Federico Vespignani, unless stated otherwise

 

 

Interview with Winy MaAs at Venice Architecture Biennale 2025

 

Designboom (DB): It’s wonderful to see you here in Venice, Winy. We saw the Sombra Pavilion in the garden on our way here. We also read that it’s kinetic?

 

Winy Maas (WM): It’s a kinetic structure, yes. It doesn’t need energy. Air pressure is generated by a heat difference within the structure itself. That helps to close or open panels, cooling the building at certain corners or not. That, of course, depends on the sun. It’s good to see it in the afternoon too because they placed it next to a tree, so it stands out. The film will be made in the coming months, so we can see the functioning of this air-driven structure. It’s nice that it’s not solar. In this case, it’s only the air pressure. 

 

What we use is our knowledge of the sun. We work a lot on shadow and light. We create and research complex solar programs. After that, we can start working on the solar panel industry. Sun Rock, for example, which is our project in Taipei for the Taipower Electricity company, is a building covered with solar panels. It’s an example of how we use the sun. It’s a nice project too, and I love it. 

MVRDV winy maas
the project uses physics to create shade without electricity

 

 

DB: So, the Sombra Pavilion is one project of MVRDV here at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025. In the Arsenale, you have another titled Biotopia under The Why Factory, which is the think tank and research institute that you lead. Here, it comes in two parts. The first a 3D printed model with the visual artist Federico Diaz that explores the idea of living matter in continuous transformation. The other is a movie that documents and visualizes this future. First off, how do you see a biotopic world?

 

WM: Biotopia is a dream. Imagine a fully recyclable, biological world that combines all the properties we need: energy, oxygen, animals, shelter, light, flexibility, and changeability. There’s a huge list of properties we demand from our materials and surroundings. Biotopia philosophizes and speculates on the idea that if we create a material or combination of materials that can facilitate these needs precisely when desired by humans, nature, or animals, that will lead to a city you can’t yet imagine. I’m pursuing a few things with my Utopia concept. 

 

First, I’m trying to paint a sketch. The seven-minute accompanying film visitors see needs improvement, so it will progress over time, to the next step. Second, I’m creating a timeline sequence of materials, an interesting research project I’ll publish in a book. This timeline will detail all the properties we need, measured in time per second, for an average population density. That’s a crucial part. We calculate what we can do with current materials and what’s possible if certain material innovations occur. 

MVRDV winy maas
the pavilion is at the European Cultural Centre’s Giardini Marinaressa | photo by Jaap Heemskerk

 

 

WM (continued): There are three epochs in these steps, with the current epoch of innovation per technology, like improved 3D printing. The entire MVRDV group is part of this research. A lot is already happening; we have old materials and new materials emerging. We see this more and more, with layers of wood combined with glue, like glulam and CLT. We also have more types of sandwich constructions. Materials are becoming collaborative.  But what if this collaboration becomes more intense?

 

Materials could help provide light, others energy, and perhaps they could even move. That’s what this timeline aims to explore, too: what kind of collaborations are needed. We’ll depict these in the final timeline, the Blend, where everything is so interactive and active. It could lead to a completely different type of architecture or urbanism. Finally, we’re developing prototypes. These are diverse. One is 3D printing, aiming to move beyond current prefabrication methods. While prefab is fine, 3D printing offers more flexibility.

MVRDV winy maas
the structure turns reused beams into large arches, supported by metal ribs | photo by Jaap Heemskerk

 

 

DB: We were told that the sculptural installation at the Arsenale was supposed to be made of living organisms instead of 3D printed from polymer. 

 

WM: Yes, and I’m still completely open to it, but that’ll most likely be after the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025. There’s this dream of using 3D printing that involves two components, or three elements, that are not currently part of 3D printing. The first is what we call the material bank. Carlo Ratti adopted this idea, which involved a machine design where you have various materials. You feed these materials into the 3D printer, which could have multiple nozzles – one for concrete, one for stone, one for glass, one for steel, one for minerals, and one for wood. 

 

This allows you to select the desired material as you print, changing nozzles along the printing line. This is part of the design. The second component is the printer itself, which is a mixed printer and an ‘un-printer.’ This allows materials to be changed and adapted. To achieve this, an analyzer scans the surface, determines its composition, and then initiates a destruction operation. This process varies depending on the material. For example, 100% glass is easy to break and can be burned in two steps. 

MVRDV winy maas
when direct sunlight heats small air canisters, the air pressure inside increases | photo by Jaap Heemskerk

 

 

WM (continued): You remove the material, burn it, and the burner sends it to the material bank, from which it can be returned to the printer. This applies to all types of materials. So, we have the mixer, the printer, the ‘un-printer,’ and the material bank. The final component is the monitor, where you design and input data. This input isn’t just for design; it’s also a control mechanism. During printing, you need to monitor the process to prevent cracking. 

 

This can involve adding more water because the printing material is like a pudding that needs to be as fluid as possible for adhesion. Adding more water helps with the drying period, and you can also use other polymers. I can provide the diagram, but I should patent it first. This is the dream, so far. There’ll also be these robots that would be there to help construct these. I also have a sequence of mycelium tests that I want to do with the school in Jakarta.

MVRDV-winy-maas-kinetic-sombra-pavilion-biotopia-installation-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-designboom-ban

the frame holds triangular panels fitted with perforated metal screens | photo by Jaap Heemskerk

DB: That was our follow-up question: the use of biomaterials. It seems that you’ve already used them in your recent projects. In line with this, you’ve also had a talk discussing computational design and algorithms in architecture and design. In what ways have you and MVRDV adopted them into your workflow?

 

WM: We have our specialties as an office and research group. I cannot do everything, so we need to collaborate extensively. I’m proficient in scripting; our office was one of the first to adopt it, and now our department excels in it. Our team is well-trained in computation and computer science, which I believe is a significant asset. We are skilled in space design, like any architect, and we are also strong in visualization.

 

DB: What do you think is our progress towards a biotopic world?

 

WM: There’s a wide range of research I’m trying to gather and collect. We have the example of 3D printing and mycelium. I’m also looking into the lignification of lignin from trees to accelerate this process in the farming industry. This would make the material more fluid, more like willow. I’m also incredibly interested in the electrical changeability of materials, like electrical rubber, for instance. In short, it’s a long process, but the beauty of it is fantastic.

view of the Biotopia installation at the Arsenale | all exhibition photos by Celeste Studio
view of the Biotopia installation at the Arsenale | all exhibition photos by Celestia Studio

 

 

DB: Are there other materials you want to work or experiment with? What’s next for you?

 

WM: I like the lignin and the washing-stone technology. This is a new technique we’re developing with Eindhoven. You add a layer of stone, which washes away, and then it assembles into soil. So, it’s essentially accelerating soil creation through erosion and its distribution. This helps plants grow, especially in shadowy areas. We’ve already applied this concept in Dubai for a new pavilion. 

 

Let’s go back to what you said before we started the interview. We’re sitting in a park, and you asked if I have a relationship with nature. My background already explains it, and I think our architecture is involved in that, meaning nature. I think we make it possible to reconnect people with nature. I like your question about what’s next because that’s the topic of the book we’re making. My lectures are always about what’s next, and they include slides. There are many subjects. I can dream about utopia as a kind of end result, if that’s possible. 

 

Then, I also have to study mobility. I need to consider when I move and what makes sense, so we’re doing a new study on velocity with different industries. We’re checking how the city would look with a certain kind of mobility: if I walk only, or if I have horses, or if I have three types of mobility. I also want to add properties to drones. It’s not about sending packages, which we can already do. We have a drone skycar in Shenzhen, and surveying is another use. But you can also construct. So I ask my collaborators and clients, ‘What can I do if I want to build a house in the sky?’ Just as a hypothesis. We’ll see.

the installation comes with an accompanying film documenting the building of Biotopia
the installation comes with an accompanying film documenting the building of Biotopia

the first part of the installation is the 3D printed sculpture made of polymer
the first part of the installation is the 3D printed sculpture made of polymer

Winy Maas and his think tank The Why Factory collaborate with visual artist Federico Díaz for the sculpture
Winy Maas and his think tank The Why Factory collaborate with visual artist Federico Díaz for the sculpture

MVRDV-winy-maas-kinetic-sombra-pavilion-biotopia-installation-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-designboom-ban2

the installations are on view in Venice until November 2025

 

project info:

 

architect: Winy Maas

firm: MVRDV | @mvrdv

 

Biotopia

lead architect: Winy Maas

think tank: The Why Factory

artist: Federico Díaz | @federico_diaz_hands

location: Arsenale

event: Venice Architecture Biennale 2025

dates: May 10th to November 23rd, 2025

photography: Celestia Studio, The Why Factory | @celestiastudio

 

SOMBRA Pavilion

lead architect: Jacob van Rijs

collaboration: Metadecor, Airshade Technologies, MVRDV, Alumet, Van Rossum Raadgevend Ingenieurs, Arup, Kersten Europe, the AMOLF Institute | @metadecor, @airshadetechnologies, @mvrdv, @alumet_nl, @vanrossumbv, @arupgroup 

exhibition: Time Space Existence

location: Giardini Marinaressa

address: Riva dei Sette Martiri, 30122 Venice, Italy

photography: Federico Vespignani, Jaap Heemskerk | @federico_vespignani

The post MVRDV’s winy maas on kinetic sombra pavilion and biotopia installation at venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
OZRUH and ETH zurich repurpose marble dust into 3D printed stone installation in venice https://www.designboom.com/design/3d-printed-marble-dust-installation-regenerative-materials-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-ozruh-eth-zurich-06-01-2025/ Sun, 01 Jun 2025 06:45:13 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1135969 the project, led by OZRUH in collaboration with ETH zurich, attempts to look into how architecture can address waste with regenerative materials.

The post OZRUH and ETH zurich repurpose marble dust into 3D printed stone installation in venice appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
Exploring regenerative materials with 3D printed marble dust

 

OZRUH and ETH Zurich regenerate marble dust waste into 3D printed stone installation at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025. On view between May 10th and November 23rd, 2025, the project attempts to look into how architecture can address waste using modular structure and regenerative materials. It’s a two-part project for the design teams. The first one is the modular 3D printed marble dust, located at the Pavilion of Türkiye. The next, a documentary film in the Artificial section of the Arsenale curated by Carlo Ratti, where the robots are present, too.

 

A focus on the 3D printed marble dust: it’s called Anti-Ruin. OZRUH and ETH Zurich use the byproduct of the marble extraction processes at the Lasa Marmo Quarry in South Tyrol for the installation. The teams process the dust using a binder jetting method developed by Dr. Pietro Odaglia at Digital Building Technologies, ETH Zurich. It adopts a liquid binder to solidify the dust. The process, then, doesn’t need molds or formwork. As a result, the teams have two columns and a horizontal slab, all of which are modular. They form the ensemble of the 3D printed marble dust.

3D printed marble dust
all images courtesy of OZRUH | all photos by Lloyd Lee

 

 

Stone installation at the Venice architecture biennale 2025 

 

One of the columns isn’t connected to the slab; the user can adjust or move it. The structural engineering team at formDP turns to computational tools to produce it like this. The software helped them calculate the center of gravity and internal load paths of the slab. The reason it is adjustable is because OZRUH and ETH Zurich want to explore the boundaries of architectural completeness at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025. Instead of viewing buildings as either finished or unfinished, Anti-Ruin lets each construction phase and piece function independently and be modular, a growing trend in recent architecture. The 3D printed marble dust installation forms part of the ‘Grounded / Yerebatan’ exhibition at the Pavilion of Türkiye, curated by Bilge Kalfa and Ceren Erdem, commissioned by İKSV.

 

Since the project integrates recycled materials from quarry waste, it can be disassembled and reused. The accompanying film at the Arsenale by Troy Edige and Beyza Mese documents the design, printing, and construction stages. It includes footage from ETH Zurich and the Lasa Marmo Quarry. The next stop of Anti-Ruin is at the World Design Congress at the Barbican in London, between September 9th and 10th, 2025. This phase applies the same system to alternative construction waste, including crushed brick and demolition dust. In this way, the 3D printed marble dust continues as an installation that focuses on recycling and making modular components for architecture.

3D printed marble dust
3D printed installation at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2025 from marble dust and recycled components

3D printed marble dust
the project, led by OZRUH in collaboration with ETH Zurich, looks into how architecture can address waste

3D printed marble dust
it’s a two-part project, with the first one being the modular 3D printed marble dust

3D printed marble dust
the installation by OZRUH and ETH Zurich is inside the Pavilion of Türkiye

3D printed marble dust
OZRUH and ETH Zurich use the byproduct of the marble extraction processes at the Lasa Marmo Quarry

3D-printed-installation-marble-dust-regenerative-materials-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-OZRUH-ETH-zurich-designboom-ban

the teams process the dust using a binder jetting method

the process doesn’t need molds or formwork to function or be produced
the process doesn’t need molds or formwork to function or be produced

detailed view of Anti-Ruin
detailed view of Anti-Ruin

there's an accompanying documentary film in the Artificial section of the Arsenale
there’s an accompanying documentary film in the Artificial section of the Arsenale

3D-printed-installation-marble-dust-regenerative-materials-venice-architecture-biennale-2025-OZRUH-ETH-zurich-designboom-ban2

the movie documents the teams’ process

 

project info:

 

name: Anti-Ruin

design: OZRUH | @ozruh_official

institution: ETH Zurich | @ethzurich

engineering: formDP | @form_dp

photography: Lloyd Lee

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: matthew burgos | designboom

The post OZRUH and ETH zurich repurpose marble dust into 3D printed stone installation in venice appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
‘we all can do more with less’: oshinowo studio brings lagos’ markets to the venice biennale https://www.designboom.com/architecture/oshinowo-studio-lagos-markets-venice-architecture-biennale-interview-05-30-2025/ Fri, 30 May 2025 20:45:16 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1136093 tosin oshinowo discusses with designboom how lagos’s informal markets reveal a radical model of circularity.

The post ‘we all can do more with less’: oshinowo studio brings lagos’ markets to the venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
lagos markets land at the venice architecture biennale 2025

 

Lagos-based architecture practice Oshinowo Studio brings ‘Alternative Urbanism: self-organising markets of Lagos‘ to the 19th International Architecture Exhibition of the Venice Biennale, spotlighting three of the city’s most dynamic informal markets—Ladipo, Computer Village, and Katangua. Invited by curator Carlo Ratti to respond to his circular economy manifesto, the studio explores how these systems repurpose waste from the global north into valuable goods, offering a powerful model of embedded circularity. ‘These markets don’t work just as places of commerce and exchange,’ notes founder Tosin Oshinowo in an exclusive interview with designboom. ‘What is fascinating is the factory-like process that occurs when a source material is re-appropriated and adapted through different sectors in these markets,’ she tells us. Through immersive film, photography, data visualisations, and recycled denim maps crafted in Katangua, the exhibition reframes Lagos’s markets as complex infrastructures of ingenuity, shaped by scarcity and sustained by collective intelligence.

 

Rejecting voyeuristic representations of African spaces, the installation at the Arsenale avoids still images of deprivation and instead offers a technical view into the working mechanics of these markets. ‘It was important that the narrative be optimistic; after all, I live and work in Lagos,’ Oshinowo says. ‘I do not see what happens here as backwards or deprived; I see this as fascinating, innovative, and the other extreme of global capitalism,’ she adds. With her team’s mapping, video documentation, and textile production done within Katangua, the pavilion elevates local material knowledge to an international stage. In doing so, it delivers a clear message to Biennale visitors.‘The biggest lesson and shift in perspective I hope to share and inspire with this global audience is that we all can do more with less,’ Tosin Oshinowo suggests.


Alternative Urbanism: self-organising markets of Lagos at the Arsenale | image by Paul Raftery

 

 

Oshinowo Studio offers a blueprint for adaptive urban futures

 

Ladipo Market deals in second-hand car parts; Computer Village in used electronics; and Katangua in recycled fashion. While their contents differ, their shared value lies in how they extend the life of consumer goods through a communal network of reuse, repair, and resale. ‘These specialist markets emerge across the city in white and brown-fill sites, residential zones, and defunct industrial parks,’ Tosin Oshinowo shares with designboom. ‘Through a collective intelligence, the city operates at a sophisticated level outside of orthodox methodologies and functions at scale without the expected industrialized infrastructure.’ Her exhibition doesn’t romanticize the struggle but rather reframes Lagos’s informal urban systems as prototypes for sustainable cities—systems built from adaptation, making them increasingly relevant in a time of global resource scarcity.

 

As Oshinowo explains, these spaces represent ‘a glimpse into an urban condition without imperialism, colonialism, and modernism imposed on the continent.’ Far from being symbols of deprivation, the markets are framed as energetic ecosystems shaped by ‘bottom-up structures and soft-power systems.’ Located in areas ranging from residential zones to defunct industrial parks, each market illustrates the kind of grassroots adaptability often excluded from conventional urban planning. With Nigeria’s currency devalued by 700% since 2005 and most of the population living on under $2 a day, these markets respond with a resilience that blends necessity with aspiration. ‘The majority of Africa is urbanized but not industrialized,’ the Lagos-based architect explains. ‘This situation creates an urban condition that is alternative to conventional expectations of progress and development.’ Read on for our full interview with Tosin Oshinowo.


the studio explores how these systems repurpose waste | image by Paul Raftery

 

 

interview with Tosin Oshinowo

 

designboom (DB): Alternative Urbanism is a powerful title—how does it reflect your view of Lagos’s informal markets, and in what ways do they challenge conventional models of urban planning and sustainability?

 

Tosin Oshinowo (TO): The title is impactful; however, it simply states a reality that occurs as parallel development with the rest of the world. The majority of Africa is urbanized but not industrialized, and this situation creates an urban condition that is alternative to conventional expectations of progress and development. This research project uses the informal market as an entry point to understand this condition. Lagos is a heightened example of this condition because of its critical mass—the city has 0.3% of Nigeria’s surface area and 10% of its population, 26.4 million. With insufficient industrialized infrastructure, it is challenging to manage the city structurally. This density allows us to observe this condition in concentration. These markets happen when bottom-up structures and soft-power systems come to the foreground.

 

Rem Koolhaas’ research in the late 1990s and early 2000s observed that the urban condition in Lagos defied orthodox planning methodologies. Here, I suggest that instead of defying these methodologies, what we observe in the city condition reverts to an evolution from tradition. It could be considered a glimpse into an urban condition without imperialism, colonialism, and modernism imposed on the continent. The informal African market is the most unadulterated urban artifact of our city’s developmental framework. It is the fabric of the commons, a shared space everyone contributes to and shares in its benefits. The markets operate in a capitalist model and outside of it. The markets have evolved from pre-colonial times to their present state in the post-colonial African city. Holding more than just places of commerce and exchange, but also of divine importance. In Yorùbá culture from southwest Nigeria, the market holds divine significance in mythology as it is seen as the point of final departure for the soul from the earth (ilé) as it rightfully returns to the heavens (òrun).


recycled denim maps crafted in Katangua | image by Paul Raftery

 

 

DB: Carlo Ratti’s circular economy manifesto set the tone for this year’s Biennale. How did it resonate with your existing observations of Lagos, and what discoveries emerged from your research into these self-organizing markets?

 

TO: When I first read Carlo Ratti’s manifesto, I was excited that this research resonated with the theme and perfect timing. There is nothing more euphoric than realizing that you are part of a change movement. Circularity has been a long-standing practice in regions that deal with austerity. It is encouraging that there is a growing understanding globally that we all need to embody this methodology. When I started the research on the markets, it was initially out of an interest to understand how global south cities function at scale with inadequate infrastructure.

 

As I developed this narrative, I observed how sophisticated the system of markets and circularity is embedded into commerce and city life. I observed that due to Nigeria’s challenged economic condition and the reality of desires to live in modernity, capital-intensive consumer products are outside of the immediate reach of the average Nigerian consumer, with the Nigerian Naira devalued by 700% since 2005. These markets don’t work just as places of commerce and exchange. Several specialist markets sell second-hand products considered redundant from the global north. What is fascinating is the factory-like process that occurs when a source material is re-appropriated and adapted through different sectors in these markets. These markets effectively take waste from the global north and extend product life while producing less carbon.


the exhibition reframes Lagos’s markets as complex infrastructures of ingenuity | image by Andrea Avezzù

 

 

DB: Ladipo, Computer Village, and Katangua each represent a different kind of circular ingenuity. Why these three, and what do they collectively reveal about resilience and resourcefulness in urban Nigeria?

 

TO: So far, the research has documented 80+ specialist markets, as the convergence of like-for-like across the city’s urban fabric has been fascinating. I selected these three markets for the exhibition because their content deals with circularity. Like all markets, they deal with consumer goods, but these three represent staples of modernity. And the opportunity for people in these regions to afford capital-intensive consumer goods like cars, electronics, and clothes. Where does the hyperconsumerist global north dispose of its waste? Today, two-thirds of Nigerians live on less than $2 a day. These conditions create the fertile ground to harbor this kind of circularity not seen before structural adjustment programs imposed on the global south from the mid-1980s and early 1990s.

oshinowo-studio-lagos-circular-markets-venice-architecture-biennale-interview-designboom-large01

the installation offers a technical view into the working mechanics of these markets | image by Andrea Avezzù

 

DB: Your pavilion merges data, video, and recycled textiles to evoke the atmosphere of the markets. How did you navigate the challenge of capturing their energy and complexity within the formal setting of the Arsenale?

 

TO: It was challenging, particularly because I was mindful not to share this as a narrative of deprivation, which can easily come across by using still images from Africa. It was important that the narrative be optimistic; after all, I live and work in Lagos. I do not see what happens here as backwards or deprived; I see this as fascinating, innovative, and the other extreme of global capitalism.

 

The essence of the immersive film of the market captured a narrative of intense activity and optimism. It was a great privilege for the team to have access to film and photograph these spaces, and we do not take for granted the immense trust we have been given. It was also important that this did not become just an immersive film; we wanted to ensure that we showed a technical prowess to document the urban condition of these markets, which we showed through a series of mappings taken of each market and its surrounding urban fabric. The medium we used to show these was heat-transfer graphics placed in recycled denim patchwork, all produced in the Katangua market. Coupled with pause moments captured through photography, it created a visual language that was intriguing and enigmatic in its context.


immersive film, photography and data visualisations shape the exhibition | image by Paul Raftery

 

 

DB: The notion of ‘communal intelligence’ underpins your curatorial narrative. How do these markets embody that idea, and what lessons might formal design systems draw from it?

 

TO: The specialist markets in Lagos are informal; the state does not plan them, and they have emerged due to specific conducive political, social, and economic conditions. These markets as individual nodes have clear governing and management structures. Still, observing from the macro level, it’s fascinating to see that through a collective intelligence, the city operates at a sophisticated level outside of orthodox methodologies and functions at scale without the expected industrialized infrastructure. It is outside of conventional ways of thinking about the modern city, which tends to be the top-down result of the collective few. These specialist markets emerge across the city in white and brown-fill sites, residential zones, and defunct industrial parks. These markets resonate with the theme of communal intelligence, highlighting the system that speaks to an alternative urbanism, which contributes sparingly to our global carbon challenge in their operation and an optimistic conversation on circularity.


Katangua Market overview | image by Andrew Esiebo

 

 

DB: With a global audience in Venice, what shifts in perception about African cities—especially Lagos—do you hope this exhibition might provoke or inspire?

 

TO: The world can learn a lot from African cities. This region, which is the least industrialized yet urbanized, contributes the least to global carbon emissions while suffering some of the most severe damage. The biggest lesson and shift in perspective I hope to share and inspire with this global audience is that we all can do more with less.

oshinowo-studio-lagos-circular-markets-venice-architecture-biennale-interview-designboom-large02

market stall at Computer Village | image by Nengi Nelson

 

project info:

 

name: Alternative Urbanism: self-organising markets of Lagos

architect – curator: Lagos-based | @oshinowo.studio

founder & lead curator: Tosin Oshinowo | @tosin.oshinowo

location: Arsenale, Venice, Italy

 

program: Venice Architecture Biennale | @labiennale

dates: May 10th — November 23rd, 2025

photographers: Paul Raftery | @paulrafterystudio, Andrea Avezzù | @ave_zz, Andrew Esiebo | @andrewesiebo, Nengi Nelson | @nenginelson1, Taran Wilkhu | @taranwilkhu, Amanda Iheme | @amandaiheme, Olarenwaju Ali | @olanrewaju_v

The post ‘we all can do more with less’: oshinowo studio brings lagos’ markets to the venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
qatar charts architecture of belonging and care across MENASA region at venice biennale https://www.designboom.com/architecture/qatar-venice-biennale-exhibition-architecture-hospitality-belonging-menasa-beyti-beytak-05-29-2025/ Thu, 29 May 2025 10:10:31 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1136018 from the works of hassan fathy to balkrishna doshi, the exhibition maps an architectural history of traditions of welcome, gathering, and collective care in the region.

The post qatar charts architecture of belonging and care across MENASA region at venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
Beyti Beytak. My Home is Your Home. La mia casa è la tua casa

 

Qatar’s national participation at the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale maps a cultural and architectural history of traditions of welcome, gathering, and collective care across the MENASA region, split across two sites across the city. Titled Beyti Beytak. My Home is Your Home. La mia casa è la tua casa, its first expression is a temporary pavilion in the Giardini by Yasmeen Lari (read our interview with the Pakistani architect here), while the other is a major archival exhibition inside the Palazzo Franchetti. In the latter, curators Aurélien Lemonier and Sean Anderson treat the metaphor of hospitality as a design principle that has shaped the built environment across geographies and generations — from homes, mosques, and schools to museums, gardens, and even entire cities. Doing so, they delve into some of the greatest, and emerging, profiles that have illustrated this across countries such as Palestine, Pakistan, India, Morocco, Egypt, Iraq, Qatar, and beyond. The show presents drawings, models, photos, and more from more than 30 architects and collectives, spanning from Hassan Fathy and Balkrishna Doshi to younger voices like Sumaya Dabbagh, Abeer Seikaly, and Rizvi Hassan.

 

Throughout the rooms of the historic Palazzo, the show is loosely organized into seven sections — each one pointing to a different typology of collective life, sketching a constellation of projects shaped by climate, community, and care. Here, the oasis is imagined as a generative metaphor for exchange and encounter, while social housing projects from Lahore, Mumbai, and New Gourna offer intimate insights into how the home can be shared, extended, and adapted in various socio-political climates. Mosques and museums, too, are included as civic anchors that embed public life with rituals of togetherness and reflection. The exhibition is produced by Qatar Museums and organized by the forthcoming Art Mill Museum.

qatar’s venice biennale exhibition charts architecture of belonging across MENASA region
on view at the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale | image by by Giuseppe Miotto — Marco Cappelletti Studio

 

 

qatar museums at venice architecture biennale

 

The exhibition opens with Reimagining the Oasis, illustrating it as a simple water source in a landscape, a large farm, or even a city, and looking at projects from Iran, Iraq, and North Africa, and more. The space explores the role of the oasis in transmitting cultures over time, examining how water and vegetation have historically generated life, and as an extension, public space.

 

Egyptian architect Hassan Fathy, for instance, in the 1900s continued to examine rural typologies along the waters, and how they could be alleviated for sustainable, collective living. More recently, Jordanian architect Abeer Sekaily has taken inspiration from the craftsmanship behind the tents of nomadic Bedouin communities to create her domed Weaving a Home tent which further questions the social implications of creating shelters for displaced communities.

qatar’s venice biennale exhibition charts architecture of belonging across MENASA region
Beyti Beytak. My Home is Your Home. La mia casa è la tua casa | image by Giuseppe Miotto — Marco Cappelletti Studio

 

  

CIVIC LIFE AS A CONTINUUM across community centers and mosques

 

Community centers are positioned in the exhibition as sites where architecture directly responds to the needs and practices of the people who use it. Whether improvised on woven mats or embedded in the civic fabric of informal settlements, these projects position design as an extension of shared life rather than a formal imposition. In Iran, DAAZ Office’s Jadgal Elementary School was developed through participatory processes to reflect indigenous spatial customs while supporting education as a tool for economic and cultural resilience. In Cairo, Ahmed Hossam Saafan’s Dawar El Ezba Cultural Center provides a kitchen, workshop, and gathering space within one of the city’s largest informal neighborhoods, designed with and for a marginalized community.

 

Ahead, the exhibition looks closer into the role of the mosque in particular as both a sacred space and an architectural form crucial to welcoming a wide spectrum of human activity. From Marina Tabassum’s contemporary Bait ur Rouf Mosque in Bangladesh to Sumaya Dabbagh’s Mosque of Mohamed Abdulkhaliq Gargash in the UAE, this part of Beyti Beytak looks at the work of three leading women architects and explores how mosques often act as cooling centres, learning hubs, and places of shelter. Their openness, in plan and in social role, is central to the exhibition’s reading of architecture as hospitable infrastructure.

qatar’s venice biennale exhibition charts architecture of belonging across MENASA region
Hassan Fathy, in the 1900s, continued to examine rural typologies along oases | image by Giuseppe Miotto — Marco Cappelletti Studio

 

 

the making of domestic architecture

 

In City Houses and Social Housing, we encounter a shifting idea of domestic space, turning toward a more porous environment shaped by rituals and collective gathering. For communities in the MENASA region, the architecture of the home has been organized around cultural and spatial features such as courtyards and terraces that have allowed a degree of both connectivity and privacy. Works on view also consider how domestic spaces might have seeped into the street in the context of the bustling contemporary metropolis, becoming a part of the fabric of the city itself. In this section, drawings of plans outline Hassan Fathy’s New Gourna Village in Egypt, while contemporary examples from Iraq and India show how homes are often co-produced and adapted over time.

qatar’s venice biennale exhibition charts architecture of belonging across MENASA region
celebrating mosque architecture by three women architects | image by Giuseppe Miotto — Marco Cappelletti Studio

 

 

the art of gardens in islamic and secular traditions

 

Building on this, the Art of Gardens section moves inward to explore verdant landscapes as crucial sites of memory and care in today’s cultural spaces, while celebrating their role in visual practices. Projects from India to Qatar trace how gardens operate as sensory and spatial interfaces between built form and natural systems, in both religious and secular contexts. In Islamic traditions, the garden is a metaphor for paradise, symbolically tied to the water resources they hold. But they also work as a cooling device, a place of retreat, and a tool for ecological thinking.

 

Through carefully selected drawings and fieldwork, the section shows how landscape design carries emotional, spiritual, and architectural weight across institutions in public spaces across the world. One such example is the Chihilsitoon Garden, Kabul’s largest historic public garden which was revitalized after destruction in the war of 1979-80, becoming a crucial shared space for the public and a sustainer of life and livelihoods.

qatar-museums-beyti-beytak-venice-architecture-biennale-designboom-03

the exhibition is produced by Qatar Museums | image by Giuseppe Miotto — Marco Cappelletti Studio


image by Giuseppe Miotto — Marco Cappelletti Studio

qatar’s venice biennale exhibition charts architecture of belonging across MENASA region
Sameep Padora, ‘Memories of Landscape’, Hampi Art Lab | image by Giuseppe Miotto — Marco Cappelletti Studio

qatar’s venice biennale exhibition charts architecture of belonging across MENASA region
Ajmal Maiwandi, Chihilston Garden and Palace Rehabilitation, Kabul, 2015–2018 | image by Simon Norfolk


Ahmed Hossam Saafan, Dawar El Ezba Cultural Center, Cairo, 2019 | image © Ahmed Hossam Saafan

qatar’s venice biennale exhibition charts architecture of belonging across MENASA region
DAAZ Office, Jadgal Elementary School, 2017–2020 | image courtesy DAAZ, by Deed Studio


Sumaya Dabbagh, Mleiha Archaeological Center, 2016 | image courtesy Dabbagh Architects, by Gerry O’Leary, Rami Mansour

 

 

project info:

 

name: Beyti Beytak. My Home is Your Home. La mia casa è la tua casa

curator: Aurélien Lemonier, Sean Anderson

organizer: Qatar Museums | @qatar_museums, Art Mill Museum

location: Palazzo Franchetti, Venice, Italy

 

program: Venice Architecture Biennale | @labiennale

dates: May 10th — November 23rd, 2025

The post qatar charts architecture of belonging and care across MENASA region at venice biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
aquapraça: floating cultural plaza by carlo ratti & höweler + yoon unveiled for brazil’s COP30 https://www.designboom.com/architecture/cra-carlo-ratti-howeler-yoon-floating-climate-responsive-plaza-cop30-brazil-aquapraca-05-28-2025/ Wed, 28 May 2025 09:30:41 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1135685 debuting at the venice architecture biennale, the platform harnesses natural intelligence and responsive technologies to adapt to rising water levels.

The post aquapraça: floating cultural plaza by carlo ratti & höweler + yoon unveiled for brazil’s COP30 appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
carlo ratti & höweler + yoon urge global climate dialogue

 

Amid rising sea levels and growing calls for adaptable infrastructure, AquaPraça is a proposal for a floating cultural plaza hosting gatherings for global climate dialogue. Developed by CRA–Carlo Ratti Associati and Höweler + Yoon for the upcoming COP30 in Brazil, the public space harnesses natural intelligence, responsive technologies, and Archimedes’ principle to adapt to rising water levels and occupancy demands, exploring a new symbiosis between architecture and the environment.

 

The structure spans over 400 square meters and comprises a series of sloping surfaces and adaptive systems. Sensors, responsive technologies, and the natural flow of water work together to ensure the submersible platform adjusts its buoyancy in real-time. As water levels shift, so does AquaPraça, holding and releasing water to maintain a minimal difference between its surface and the sea. It is also designed to meet visitors at eye level with the ocean, bringing various perspectives on the realities of climate change into physical, immediate view. While models were unveiled at the main exhibition of the 19th Venice Architecture Biennale, the design team will return in September to debut the built prototype. In November, it will be taken to COP30 in Belém where it will anchor the Italian Pavilion, and as the summit concludes, the structure will remain in the Amazon as a long-term cultural landmark.

carlo ratti & höweler + yoon to unveil floating, climate-responsive plaza at COP30 in brazil
all images courtesy of CRA–Carlo Ratti Associati

 

 

A FLOATING PLAZA FOR climate discourse at COP30 in THE AMAZON 

 

AquaPraça is currently under construction by Cimolai in northeastern Italy, and at COP30, to be held in the Amazonian city of Belém, it will host exhibitions, workshops, and symposia as the centerpiece of Italy’s pavilion, capable of hosting over 150 people at once. Beyond its distinct position carved into the sea, the project is defined by its insistence on responsiveness.

 

‘In 1979, Aldo Rossi launched the Teatro del Mondo at the first Biennale Architettura, positing that architecture could engage with the past,’ says Carlo Ratti, curator of the 2025 Biennale and co-founder of CRA. ‘Today, AquaPraça shows how architecture can engage with the future — by responding to climate and engaging with nature rather than resisting it.’ 45 years after Rossi’s floating theatre moved through the Venetian lagoon, this new platform builds on that legacy, recasting architecture’s role as an active participant in shaping the environmental futures of the cities it touches.

carlo ratti & höweler + yoon to unveil floating, climate-responsive plaza at COP30 in brazil
AquaPraça is a proposal for a floating cultural plaza hosting gatherings for global climate dialogue

carlo ratti & höweler + yoon to unveil floating, climate-responsive plaza at COP30 in brazil
developed by CRA–Carlo Ratti Associati and Höweler + Yoon

aquapraca-floating-plaza-COP30-carlo-ratti-associati-designboom-01

it comprises a series of sloping surfaces and adaptive systems

carlo ratti & höweler + yoon to unveil floating, climate-responsive plaza at COP30 in brazil
sensors, responsive technologies, and the natural flow of water work to ensure the platform adjusts its buoyancy


the project will debut at the Venice Architecture Biennale in September 2025

carlo ratti & höweler + yoon to unveil floating, climate-responsive plaza at COP30 in brazil
in November, it will be part of the Italian Pavilion at COP30 in Brazil


exploring a new symbiosis between architecture and the environment

aquapraca-floating-plaza-COP30-carlo-ratti-associati-designboom-02

beyond its distinct position carved into the sea, the project is defined by its insistence on responsiveness

    

project info:

 

name: AquaPraça

architect: CRA–Carlo Ratti Associati | @crassociati, Höweler + Yoon | @howeleryoonarchitecture

collaborators: Italy’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Italy’s Ministry of Environment and Energy Security, Brazil’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, CIHEAM Bari, World Bank Group’s Connect4Climate program, Bloomberg Philanthropies

The post aquapraça: floating cultural plaza by carlo ratti & höweler + yoon unveiled for brazil’s COP30 appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
atelier alter crafts glowing nebula of civilizational stardust for the venice biennale 2025 https://www.designboom.com/art/atelier-alter-glowing-nebula-civilizational-stardust-venice-biennale-2025-china-pavilion-05-27-2025/ Tue, 27 May 2025 08:40:53 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1135123 the architects materialize a 3D star field using metal rods, spherical forms, mesh, and multicolored acrylics.

The post atelier alter crafts glowing nebula of civilizational stardust for the venice biennale 2025 appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
Atelier Alter installs galaxy of cultural memory in china pavilion

 

Atelier Alter Architects transforms the Chinese Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale into a galaxy of cultural memory with Dunhuang Con-stella-tion, a luminous sculptural installation. Architects Yingfan Zhang and Xiaojun Bu materialize a 12×8×6.5-meter 3D star field using metal rods, spherical forms, mesh, and multicolored acrylics. This construct acts as a spatial telescope linking two ancient ports of knowledge exchange, Dunhuang and Venice, through a radiant cloud of artistic and philosophical symbolism drawn from Indian, Persian, Greek, and Chinese traditions.

 

At the global stage of the 19th International Architecture Exhibition, Dunhuang Con-stella-tion is one of the twelve featured works in the China Pavilion, selected under the curatorship of Ma Yansong (MAD) (read designboom’s interview with MAD’s Ma Yansong here). Interpreting the exhibition’s theme, CO-EXIST, the installation reimagines Cave 285 from Dunhuang’s Mogao Grottoes as a celestial archive of civilizational fusion.


all images by Demone, Mint, Atelier Alter, Li Chunchao

 

 

Cave 285 as a celestial archive of ancient knowledge

 

The Mogao Caves, carved into China’s Mingsha Mountain beginning in 366 CE, are a Silk Road palimpsest where spiritual belief intertwines with global exchange. Cave 285, a focal point of the installation, contains the earliest known star chart of the Northern Hemisphere, painted across a four-sloped dome in the Western Wei period. This celestial ceiling combines deities and iconography from a rich cross-section of cultures: Indian Brahma and Ganesha, Sogdian sun and moon gods, Chinese phoenixes and Fuxi, and Persian motifs, all rendered in polychromatic harmony. The duo of Atelier Alter abstracts this cosmic fusion into an artificial nebula, where each material element represents a stroke of ancient craftsmanship, a brush of stardust floating in architectural orbit.

 

By reframing the cave’s sacred geometry through contemporary topological language, Dunhuang Con-stella-tion reveals a nonlinear constellation of meaning. The installation positions the original cave as a ‘civilizational energy diagram,’ mapping out four cultural nebulae, Indian Buddhism, Central Asian commerce, Persian artistry, and Greek sculpture, into a shared cosmological grammar. Ancient astrological systems become dynamic fields of data, visually and conceptually resonating with modern geometric thought. This echoes the Tang Dynasty’s Dunhuang Star Atlas, whose constellations mirrored imperial Chang’an’s night sky and aligned with three schools of astronomy, a precedent for this contemporary act of cultural coding.


a galaxy of cultural memory

 

 

Dunhuang Con-stella-tion, a model of cultural rebirth

 

Curated by Ma Yansong of MAD Architects, Dunhuang Con-stella-tion responds to the Biennale’s global constellation of architectural thought by aligning the ancient inclusivity of Dunhuang with the fluid hybridity of Venice. The installation aims to be a speculative model of cultural rebirth. Every metal sphere, every dust particle becomes a mnemonic device, a poetic echo of how civilizations have long intertwined through migration, translation, and artistic syncretism. As Atelier Alter suggests, cultural convergence is not about layering styles, but about generative collision, where flying apsaras dance with Greek Bodhisattvas, and Sogdian phonemes echo through Chinese sutras.


Atelier Alter Architects transforms the Chinese Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Biennale


Yingfan Zhang and Xiaojun Bu materialize a 12×8×6.5-meter 3D star field

atelier-alter-crafts-glowing-nebula-of-civilizational-stardust-for-the-venice-biennale-2025-designboom-large03

metal rods, spherical forms, mesh, and multicolored acrylics compose the structure


Con-stella-tion takes its place in the China Pavilion


a spatial telescope links two ancient ports of knowledge exchange

atelier-alter-crafts-glowing-nebula-of-civilizational-stardust-for-the-venice-biennale-2025-designboom-large02

a radiant cloud of artistic and philosophical symbolism


drawing from Indian, Persian, Greek, and Chinese traditions


one of twelve featured works featured in the China Pavilion

atelier-alter-crafts-glowing-nebula-of-civilizational-stardust-for-the-venice-biennale-2025-designboom-large01

the installation reimagines Cave 285 from Dunhuang’s Mogao Grottoes as a celestial archive of civilizational fusion

 

project info:

 

name: Con-stella-stion:Dunhuang
artist: Atelier Alter Architects | @atelier_alter_architects

location: Chinese Pavilion, Venice, Italy

 

lead designers: Yingfan Zhang & Xiaojun Bu 

curator: Ma Yansong (MAD)

program: Venice Architecture Biennale | @labiennale

dates: May 10th — November 23rd, 2025

dimensions: 12 × 8 × 6.5 meters

photographers: Demone, Mint, Atelier Alter, Li Chunchao

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: thomai tsimpou | designboom

The post atelier alter crafts glowing nebula of civilizational stardust for the venice biennale 2025 appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale https://www.designboom.com/architecture/wool-serbian-pavilion-venice-architecture-biennale-unraveling-05-23-2025/ Fri, 23 May 2025 06:45:08 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1134610 motors powered by solar panels pull the threads gradually over the exhibition's six-month run, until the installation entirely dissolves.

The post ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
unraveling: new spaces is designed to unknit itself over time

 

The Serbian Pavilion at the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale adopts wool as its primary, unexpected medium, to weave an ephemeral canopy. Titled Unraveling: New Spaces, the exhibition explores the idea of transformation in contrast to ideas of architecture as a fixed entity, knitted entirely from wool into large, light, catenary drapes. The structure, a textile environment that interacts with light and time, changes with each visit, calling for rethinking architecture as impermanent and adaptable. It was designed by Davor Ereš, Jelena Mitrović, Igor Pantić, Ivana Najdanović, Sonja Krstić, and Petar Laušević, and curated by Slobodan Jovic.

 

Motors powered by solar panels drive the unravelling process, pulling threads gradually over the exhibition’s six-month run, until the installation eventually dissolves into the raw material from which it began, ready for reuse. Between these points, the threads hang like a suspended landscape, catching rays of the sun and shifting in shape, density, and transparency as visitors walk underneath.

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
all images © ReportArch / Andrea Ferro

 

 

serbian pavilion at venice biennale considers resource life cycles

 

The Serbian Pavilion’s choice of wool — a ubiquitous domestic material though one rarely associated with architecture — foregrounds tactility and slowness, recontextualizing Serbia’s knitting traditions through algorithmic precision and renewable energy. Its movement over the months of the Biennale is systematic as it makes visible the passage of time and the quiet undoing of form, revealing a meditation on impermanence and material circularity.

 

Presented under the Biennale’s curatorial theme Intelligens. Natural. Artificial. Collective., Unraveling aligns closely with the call for expanded definitions of intelligence and authorship in architectural practice, utilizing technology only for its subtle nuances in production. The installation makes a subtle statement, remaining low-energy and reversible to foster a special care for materials amid challenges such as resource scarcity through an architecture of relationships. Its immersive effect, too, lies in the accumulation and unraveling of threads that create a suspended architecture above visitors. 

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
the pavilion of the Republic of Serbia at the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale

 

 

The project is developed by a collaborative multidisciplinary team that moves fluidly between architecture, fashion, energy research, and digital technology. Architects Davor Ereš, Jelena Mitrović, and Igor Pantić contribute expertise in computational design and fabrication, while designers Ivana Najdanović and Sonja Krstić bring deep knowledge of textile structures and knitwear construction. Researcher Petar Laušević, working in renewable energy has developed the system that powers the installation.

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
titled Unraveling: New Spaces

serbian-pavilion-venice-architecture-biennale-designboom-01

the exhibition explores the idea of transformation in contrast to ideas of architecture as a fixed entity

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
knitted entirely from wool into large, light, catenary drapes

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
a textile environment that interacts with light and time

serbian-pavilion-venice-architecture-biennale-designboom-02

changes with each visit, calling for rethinking architecture as impermanent and adaptable

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
the work slowly unravels over time

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
it will eventually dissolve into the raw material from which it began, ready for reuse

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
the installation makes a subtle statement, remaining low-energy and reversible to foster a special care for materials

serbian-pavilion-venice-architecture-biennale-designboom-03

recontextualizing Serbia’s knitting traditions through algorithmic precision

ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale
the threads hang like a suspended landscape

 

 

project info: 

 

name: Unraveling: New Spaces

curator: Slobodan Jovic

exhibition authors: Davor Ereš, Jelena Mitrović, Igor Pantić, Ivana Najdanović, Sonja Krstić, and Petar Laušević

location: Serbian Pavilion, Arsenale, Venice, Italy

 

program: Venice Architecture Biennale | @labiennale

dates: May 10th — November 23rd, 2025

The post ephemeral canopies of wool drape over serbian pavilion at venice architecture biennale appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
heatherwick studio’s space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living https://www.designboom.com/architecture/heatherwick-studio-space-garden-venice-biennale-orbits-earth-05-21-2025/ Wed, 21 May 2025 17:00:06 +0000 https://www.designboom.com/?p=1134292 set to soon launch with real-world applications, it will will be used for testing horticulture in space while supporting agricultural strategies in resource-constrained environments on earth.

The post heatherwick studio’s space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>
space garden proposes an orbiting greenhouse at venice biennale

 

Among the more speculative contributions to the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale’s main exhibition, Heatherwick Studio’s Space Garden imagines a celestial prototype for an autonomous, orbiting greenhouse. Developed in collaboration with the Aurelia Institute, the project challenges our perceptions of space and sustainability, considering how cosmic agriculture can be humanized and harnessed through biophilic space design to enhance life on Earth. ‘Space Garden started as an experiment in humanising space, by growing the plant species that make small spaces work better for your mental health,’ says Thomas Heatherwick, ‘but ultimately it’s also about using the unique ‘backyard’ of low Earth orbit to benefit life on our planet.’

 

The model stands with a somewhat surreal presence amid the brick walls of the Corderie dell’Arsenale, shaped as a cluster of 30 growth pods stemming from a luminous central chamber representing a pomegranate tree — one of the earliest plants to be cultivated by humans. Each pod, with an individually controlled climate, contains a different plant species, fungi, or algae grown from a community garden on Earth. They open and close in response to environmental conditions, shielding themselves from debris or rotating to capture sunlight via their photovoltaic cells.

heatherwick studio's space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living
Space Garden on view at Venice Architecture Biennale | image by Nik Eagland

 

 

heatherwick studio & aurelia institute humanize nature in space

 

‘I’m fascinated by outer space,’ says Thomas Heatherwick. But, maybe surprisingly, not in its own right. Instead, by its potential to help humans live better lives on Earth.’ For Heatherwick, and Aurelia Institute’s founder and space architect Dr. Ariel Ekblaw, the project sits within a broader interest in Offworlding, which the team has been continuing to develop over the years. This idea, which is set to launch with real-world applications in the near future, centers on shifting manufacturing and resource-heavy industrial processes into orbit to ease the pressure on terrestrial systems on Earth, protecting it from pollution.

 

The project also fits closely with the curatorial direction of this year’s Biennale — themed Intelligens. Natural. Artificial. Collective — which explores how these different forms of intelligence can be brought together to confront systemic challenges facing humanity. Space Garden enters this dialogue by proposing a living, automated environment that bridges engineered systems and botanical life. The unique environment of space offers us an extraordinary opportunity to design for humanity’s greatest challenges on Earth,’ says Ekblaw.

heatherwick studio's space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living
completed by Heatherwick Studio and Aurelia Institute | image by Nik Eagland

 

 

testing crop growth in space while protecting the earth

 

The garden here is presented as part of a reciprocal system between the domains of the cosmos and the Earth. Research shows that certain materials and biological processes perform better in microgravity environments: the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, for example, or the development of new tissue cultures. But historically, the design of space habitats has focused almost exclusively on survival; keeping humans alive in hostile environments. With Space Garden, Heatherwick Sutdio and Aurelia Institute push that conversation further, asking what it would take not just to survive in space, but to ultimately live well. In the same way, they consider how life in space might help humans on Earth to reconnect with nature, even in the most extreme environments.

 

Although Space Garden presents a model design prototype to pose large questions, its underlying vision is backed by applied research and a stated intent to build a functioning prototype. The team is already developing internal technical components in partnership with Daikin Industries, focusing on air and water management systems adapted for space. A section model of one pod has also been built at Autodesk’s Technology Center in Boston as part of Aurelia’s research program. The system, once implemented, will be used for testing autonomous horticulture in space to enable longer space exploration missions, and to support better agricultural strategies in resource-constrained environments on Earth.

heatherwick studio's space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living
a cluster of 30 growth pods | image by Marco Zorzanello, courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia

heatherwick studio's space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living
luminous central chamber | image by Marco Zorzanello, courtesy of La Biennale di Venezia

heatherwick studio's space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living
onsidering how cosmic agriculture can be humanized through biophilic space design | image by Nils Koenning


the pods open and close in response to environmental conditions | image by Nils Koenning

heatherwick studio's space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living
each pods contains a different plant species, fungi, or algae | image © designboom


the Space Garden is part of a reciprocal system between the cosmos and the Earth | image © designboom

space-garden-heatherwick-studio-venice-architecture-biennale-designboom-01

image © designboom

 

project info:

 

name: Space Garden

architect: Heatherwick Studio | @officialheatherwickstudio, Aurelia Institute | @aurelia_institute

location: Corderie dell’Arsenale, Venice, Italy

 

program: Venice Architecture Biennale | @labiennale

dates: May 10th — November 23rd, 2025

The post heatherwick studio’s space garden at venice biennale orbits earth for enhanced human living appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

]]>