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At the World Expo Pavilions, Future Visions


Combine Past and Present
Conversations with three figures integral to the conception of the expo.








Singapore’s 16,000-square-foot pavilion, “Nature. Nurture. Future.,” recreates a
tropical setting.Credit...Katarina Premfors for The New York Times
By Shivani Vora
Oct. 24, 2021
The countries with pavilions in the three districts of this year’s World Expo in Dubai
— Sustainability, Mobility and Opportunity — are each presenting their visions,
combining elements of the past, the future and today. Singapore is sharing its green
living principles by immersing visitors in a tropical landscape. Angola is showing
how its history and current technological innovations are intimately linked. And then
there’s the architect who designed the elaborate portals that lead to each district. The
following interviews have been edited and condensed.

Singapore’s focus on sustainability


Titled “Nature. Nurture. Future.,” Singapore’s nearly 16,000-square-foot pavilion in
the Sustainability District of the expo recreates a lush tropical setting. As designed by
the Singapore-based architectural firm WOHA, it features three cones covered in
vertical greenery with a total of 45,000 pots of plants; the interior is connected by a
canopy walk that showcases various scenes reminiscent of Singapore: a rainforest, a
cityscape and a flower garden.

In all, visitors can expect to see more than 170 varieties of plants and trees for a total
of 80,000, including orchids, jasmines, hanging vines and ficuses.

Larry Ng, the pavilion’s commissioner-general and the registrar of the board of
architects for the country discussed the concept and execution of the pavilion.

Why did you choose a tropical setting for the pavilion?


We wanted to recreate a mini-Singapore and transport visitors there. Though we
have a dense urban environment, we also have abundant greenery that is
incorporated within our cityscape — trees of all sizes, plants and flowers everywhere
you look.

Image

Singapore’s pavilion was designed by the architectural firm WOHA.Credit...Katarina


Premfors for The New York Times
How does the Singapore Pavilion reflect the sustainability story of Singapore itself?

Our pavilion presents our vision of becoming a city in nature, which is aligned with
our Singapore Green Plan 2030, a movement to advance our agenda on sustainable
development. In Singapore, we use technology for our green strategy, and we are
doing the same here.

For example, the pavilion is designed to be a self-sufficient ecosystem to achieve net-


zero energy using renewable energy. We have 517 solar panels that will supply us
with enough energy for the six-month duration of the expo. Renewable energy is also
common throughout Singapore. We have solar panels floating on our reservoir that
collect energy, which can potentially supply much of our infrastructure with power.

In addition, the pavilion uses solar energy to desalinate the groundwater that we use
to water our plants and power 51 dry mist fans to cool the pavilion. The dry mist fans,
combined with the shade and greenery, lowers the perceived temperature by 40 to 50
degrees [Fahrenheit], compared to the outside temperature, making it comfortable
for visitors even without energy-intensive air-conditioning.

Again, in Singapore we have a diversified water supply which we get from four
sources including a local catchment and desalinated water.

Image
The Singapore pavilion has robots that traverse the walls and are equipped with
cameras and sensors. They monitor the health of the plants and collect data such as
humidity and oxygen levels.Credit...Katarina Premfors for The New York Times

Design is also a part of your green strategy at the pavilion and in the country. Can you
tell us more about the role it plays?

Singapore is big on using vertical greenery whenever we can and has more than 617
acres of it throughout the nation. This is enabled by a policy called L.U.S.H. —
Landscaping for Urban Spaces and High-Rises — where the incorporation of vertical
and sky-rise greenery is encouraged in our built environment. This greenery
encourages biodiversity with the presence of butterflies, bees and birds. It also
insulates buildings and keeps them cooler. And it’s aesthetically very attractive,
which is what design is about.

By using landscaping as a design element, we are showing that the built environment
does not need to displace nature but can, in fact, coexist with it.

You’re using climbing robots to care for the pavilion’s plants. What exactly do they do?

The pavilion has three prototype climbing robots, which were developed in a
collaboration between our landscape architect firm, Salad Dressing, and a Singapore-
based start-up called Oceania Robotics.
The robots traverse the green walls and are equipped with cameras and sensors that
monitor the health of the plants and collect data such as humidity and oxygen levels.
With the information they gather, we can calibrate the amount of water needed for
irrigation or adjust the amount of grow lights needed for the plants to thrive.

Image
Angola’s pavilion at the expo was inspired by Sona geometry, an ancient art of sand
drawing.Credit...Katarina Premfors for The New York Times

To explore progress, Angola looks to its past


Angola, in southwest Africa, has a pavilion in the expo’s Mobility District, an area
dedicated to human progress and understanding cultures.

Spanning nearly 27,000 square feet, the country’s display showcases the traditions of
its Chokwe people, who date back hundreds of years, alongside current innovations.
It is divided into three clusters: culture, education and technology.

Each features movies, light shows, exhibits and image projections. Part of the
pavilion also has a stage for music and dance performances.

Although Angola is Africa’s third- largest producer of oil, that is not a subject that the
pavilion touches on. “There is so much more to us than oil, which is what we want to
share with the world,” said Albina Assis Africano, the pavilion’s commissioner
general and the country’s former minister of oil.

In an interview, Ms. Africano discussed the concept and the execution of the pavilion.

What is the purpose of the pavilion?


We want to show the relationship between Angola’s Chokwe people and the Angolans
of today.

There is a lot of interconnectedness between them. The way the Chokwes were
considered to be forward-thinking [centuries ago] is very much how Angolans strive
to be today.

In what ways do you show this connection?

The entire pavilion has displays of symbols that were important to the Chokwes.
They used hundreds of them, but we picked the seven that were the most significant.
One, for example, is of a large parrot who is part of a story from their time about the
freedom of thought. This parrot, called a Toje, is in the education cluster.

Another symbol, which is in the culture cluster, is of a dancer with open hands called
a Mascarado Cihongo. This figure is neither male nor female but just a person whom
the Chokwes revered. We show these symbols in different ways: One room emits
them through a laser light show, for example, and another has an LED installation.

Image
Another view of the Angola pavilion. Credit...Katarina Premfors for The New York
Times

How is modern Angola presented in the pavilion?

One of the biggest ways is in the technology cluster, where we share information
about the many new businesses in Angola, which are starting up every day. There’s
Tupuca, a car-sharing and food-delivery service like Uber, that’s become very
popular. Another, Appy Saude, is an app that allows users to find the closest
hospitals and pharmacies. It has been invaluable during the Covid crisis.

We also link modern technology to the past and the Chokwes with displays of the sun
drawings, which the heads of villages would draw for men to teach them about life.
Some of these drawings had mathematical origins and were a complex of geometric
shapes called fractals, which is a concept that many Angolans and people all over the
world learn about today in math.

The education cluster also presents modern Angola. One display, for instance, is on
our country’s program to educate students who are interested in the aerospace
industry. Part of this program includes the opportunity to attend a technology space
institute for free.

Culture is also a key part of the pavilion. Can you tell us more about your culture
cluster?

We will have nightly performances throughout the expo’s six months where
musicians from Angola will play modern and ancient music using modern
instruments such as guitars and drums. We are also hosting regular performances on
traditional and contemporary dance forms. And visitors can attend workshops to
learn about ancient instruments and how they were handmade.

Your pavilion’s theme is about reintroducing the disappearing art of storytelling. Why
is this important to do?

Storytelling was vital to the culture of the Chokwe people, and we wanted to highlight
its importance because old-fashioned storytelling is disappearing as the modern
world takes over. We think it’s a crucial art form that needs to be preserved.

Image
Opening the expo’s portals, which were designed by Asif Khan, a London-based
architect and designer. The portals are made of ultralightweight carbon fiber and are
70 feet in height and 100 feet in length.Credit...Katarina Premfors for The New York
Times

The man behind the gateways


The three gateways of the expo are hard to miss. Designed by Asif Khan, a London-
based architect and designer, these towering entry portals are constructed of
ultralightweight carbon fiber and are 70 feet in height and 100 feet in length.
Futuristic yet traditional, they are thin, translucent structures with a woven pattern.

Each sits at the entrances of the expo’s three districts: Sustainability, Mobility and
Opportunity.

Mr. Khan also designed many of the expo’s public spaces, including walkways and a
180-foot-tall observation tower called Garden in the Sky, which has a moving
platform full of ficus and hibiscus trees and a 360-degrees view of the show’s site.

Can you tell us about your inspiration for the entry portals and describe the design?

They’re inspired by a design element that’s very common in the Arabic region called
a mashrabiya [a latticework wooden screen]. In the West, this element is often
overlooked as mere decoration, but is in fact a device to control ventilation and
sunlight.
The first expo was in 1851 in London [then called the Great Exhibition]. Since then,
they’ve been held all over the world, but never in the Menasa region, which includes
the Middle East, North Africa and South Asia.

When I discovered this, I wanted my design approach to demonstrate what this


region has to offer the world. From wherever you see them, the portals speak of the
history and future of Islamic aesthetic culture.

The purpose of the expo is also to showcase the future, and the portals are a
representation of that; they’re a feat of engineering made with the latest materials.

In fact, they were such a challenging structure to construct that we could only have
robots do the job and worked with a structural engineer from the aircraft industry on
the design.

Image
Emirati musicians and dancers performing at the opening ceremony of the
portals.Credit...Katarina Premfors for The New York Times

What mandate were you given by the expo for both the portals and the public spaces
you designed, and what challenges did you encounter?

The brief given to us by Her Excellency Reem Al-Hashimi was to devise a language
and spatial sequence for the public realm — a unifying context — where each
architectural or landscape element would carry ideas and stories from the region to
interest and inspire the visitor and perhaps even challenge preconceptions.

It’s always challenging when you build something that has never been done. For me,
it was challenging to find the right collaborators, like the structural engineer who
helped me with the design. I had to inspire every collaborator to believe that the
impossible would be possible.

What’s the best way for the expo’s visitors to experience your work?

They should come in the morning when it opens and see the carbon-fiber gates
opening like huge doors. It’s a ceremonial process with a different person invited to
open the gates each day, and you see the portals when they’re both open and closed.
Image
Concrete benches, designed in collaboration with the calligrapher Lara Captan,
capture Arabic words selected by Emirati thinkers, scientists and
poets.Credit...Katarina Premfors for The New York Times

Talk about the public spaces you designed inside the expo.

They’re marked by black-and-white striped paths that mimic Emirati weaving


patterns. The benches that people can sit on are a reproduction of the Emirati
benches in old Dubai, and we have hundreds of them throughout the walkways.

There are also 50 calligraphic benches designed in collaboration with the calligrapher
Lara Captan, which capture Arabic words selected by a group of Emirati thinkers,
scientists and poets.

Also, I created different lanes on the same path so people can take their time, walk
briskly or run. People move at different speeds and in different ways, so when you’re
here, you can find your own pace.

What will happen to the public areas and the entry portals after the expo?

The public spaces will remain and be open for anyone to use. The portals are made
from modular components with the specific intention to allow them to be re-erected
in public spaces around the Emirates.
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