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Tkaronto Pavilion-Grain Silos: Pan Am Games

jaycola

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I saw this on the inhabitat.com site and thought it was worth discussion.

The following is the winning design from student entries to the American Institute of Architects convention in New Orleans.

The design goal was to build an awards pavilion out of sustainable vinyl for the upcoming Pan Am Games. The winning design was from a team from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology

Pan-Am-Games-Pavilion-tkaronto-6.jpg


The semi-permanent pavilion, designed by Manuel Gross, Patrik Staub, Yannick Vorberg and Stefan Vetsch will be located in Toronto’s waterfront district serving as the awards pavilion for the games, and afterwards will be used as a flexible event space for the city. The pavilion’s location serves as a bridge between the city and the waterfront encouraging visitors to cross the major transport corridors and access pedestrian baths along the water. Inspired by the name “Toronto“, which roughly means “meeting placeâ€, the pavilion serves as an interesting area under a huge balloon roof. Under the roof are a series of boxes and rooms that contain different programs.

Balloon trees are created from groupings of standard vinyl, helium-filled weather balloons held together with a PVC net and tethered to the ground with PVC coated wire ropes. Durable and long-lasting, all of the materials can be reused multiple times and easily relocated for other events. The pavilion also makes use of an existing silo facility on the waterfront, using the structure to draw people’s attention. The rooftop of the silo will also serve as a bar constructed out of steel and glass with a solar panel covered PVC membrane filled with helium to serve as a roof.

The competition was sponsored by the American Institute of Architecture Students, The Vinyl Institute and the Canadian Plastics Industry Association, and a requirement of the designs were that they include vinyl in them. Obviously the competition had a bias, so we’re still wondering whether vinyl can be considered as a sustainable material. Technically, it can be recycled and reused, and it certainly is quite durable, which are on the positive side. Inert unless burned, vinyl seems relatively non-toxic, but is produced with some very questionable materials and contains elements like chlorine, dioxins and phthalates. We’re certainly not vinyl experts and would love your thoughts if you want to weigh in.
 
The design community is finally engaging with these silos in Toronto. Some people wouldn't mind crude city-building where rather than having layers of history visible in a cityscape and preserving evidence of an interesting history of industrial activity, we just repeat the same formula of development over and over giving people the impression of a city of no more than several decades of age. However, these structures can be integrated into new uses keeping that interesting history visible and interesting for generations to come.

This idea for reuse, if ever implemented, wouldn't be a permanent solution; however, being something that seems doable, it's an important first step beyond fantasy proposals like the Canada Malting silos turned into some sort of giant fish-like structure.
 
Re: PanAm Awards Pavillion

I liked the third-placer, "Re-Connect" much, much better than the winning one! :(
 

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