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ArcelorMittal Orbit - London England

Jonny5

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Mayor Boris Johnson unveils designs for 'Britain's answer to the Eiffel tower', to be built in Olympic park

Mark Brown, arts correspondent
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 31 March 2010 14.57 BST

Designs for what will be Britain's biggest piece of public art, a 120 metres tall looping tower by the artist Anish Kapoor that people will be able to climb, giving spectacular views of London, were unveiled today by Boris Johnson, mayor of London.

An artist's impression of Anish Kapoor's giant work of public art planned for the London Olympic park. Photograph: PR
Kapoor's Orbit, a vast, snaking steel structure, will dominate the 2012 Olympic park. It is being hailed as London's answer to the Eiffel tower and is part of an ambition to make the Olympics site a permanent visitor attraction.

Kapoor won the commission from a shortlist of bidders believed to include the artist Antony Gormley and the architects Caruso St John. Johnson said of Kapoor: "He has taken the idea of a tower and transformed it into a piece of modern British art. It would have boggled the minds of the Romans. It would have boggled Gustave Eiffel."

The structure will officially be called the ArcelorMittal Orbit, after steel magnate Lakshmi Mittal, the richest man in Europe, who is funding it. Johnson said that if he and Mittal had not bumped into each other in a Davos cloakroom "we would not be where we are today".

Mittal said: "This project is an incredible opportunity to build something really spectacular for London, for the Olympic games, and something that will play a lasting role in the legacy of the games."

The structure will cost about £19.1m. Johnson said: "Of course some people will say we are nuts – in the depths of a recession – to be building Britain's biggest ever piece of public art. But both Tessa Jowell [Olympics minister] and I are certain that this is the right thing for the Stratford site, in games time and beyond."

Kapoor has collaborated on the project with his friend Cecil Balmond, one of the world's leading structural engineers. Approximately 1,400 tonnes of steel will be used. The plan is for work to begin soon with a completion date of December 2011.

Kapoor said one of his references was the Tower of Babel. "There is a kind of medieval sense to it of reaching up to the sky, building the impossible. A procession, if you like. It's a long winding spiral: a folly that aspires to go even above the clouds and has something mythic about it."
 
Perhaps now the men and women of Dofasco will erect something even bigger in Hamilton....
 
It this were tomorrow I'd think it were an April Fool's, but it's apparently real. It looks like something they'd build at Burning Man to be honest.

Granted, it's pretty out there and could maybe "win me over" in person, but it strikes me as ugly at least in that rendering.
 
I just don't understand this... there is so much incredible design talent in the UK – why do they continue to produce horrendous crap like this?? So that's obviously my personal opinion, but it seems like they try so hard to impress and fall flat on their face every time.
 
I think it looks ugly too, but it's quality as a sculpture seems emblematic of an era of architecture that is moving beyond modernism, so I think it is interesting. I would have to see it, built, in person, to truly decide. Re: Eiffel Tower. It wasn't exactly universally praised when it was built, especially amongst the city's cultural elite.
 
If it was 30 feet tall, it'd be fun and mildly spectacular, but then they wouldn't be able to gouge tourists willing to pay'n'climb. At 100 metres, though...yikes. Looks a bit like the Golden Gate Bridge might after the Big One.
 
I gave up - the queue was too long!

Kapoor's Tees Valley Giants - the first of which, Temenos , is nearing completion - are another of his large scale works:

http://www.ingenia.org.uk/ingenia/issues/issue42/Atkins.pdf

http://www.youtube.com/user/teesvalleygiants

When it comes to sculpture that's so big it can only be understood by hiking around rather than looking at from a fixed point, the 905 has the grand daddy of them all - Richard Serra's experiential sculpture Shift, built in King City 40 years ago.
 
What would be the best local example of a large scale sculptural form that doubles as practical architecture - the Crystal, maybe?
 

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