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Burnham Pavilion, Millennium Park, Chicago Building, Project, Design, Photo
Burnham Pavilion Chicago : Architecture Information
Development by Zaha Hadid in Chicago, United States of America
Burnham Pavilions in Millennium Park Close Sunday Night
Centennial kicks off Green Legacy week with deconstruction and recycling
CHICAGO, October 29, 2009 - A great number of metropolitan Chicagoans
and visitors to Millennium Park have experienced the Burnham Pavilions
that will end their free public display on Sunday night. The Pavilions
are open to the public from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. daily through November
1. The film installation in the Zaha Hadid pavilion starts playing
at 4:30 each day and is most visible after dark, when the lighting
by Dear Productions washes the innovative designs in ever-changing
colors.
The bold, cutting-edge architectural statements by Amsterdam-based
UNStudio and London-based Zaha Hadid Architects drew attention around
the world and helped engage people throughout metropolitan Chicago
in the hundreds of other exhibits, events and programs organized
by 250 partner organizations commemorating the Burnham Plan Centennial.
Images courtesy of Zaha Hadid Architects © Michelle Litvin
"We asked Zaha Hadid and Ben van Berkel to inspire Chicago
to think in new ways. A vast number of people have interacted with
the powerful beauty of these innovative forms and discovered new
ways to think about architecture and Chicago. Thomas Gray's film
inside the Zaha Pavilion challenged us to explore our past and take
responsibility for our future, and visitors had an opportunity to
interact with the next big plan through a kiosk installed by CMAP.
Like the 'wow' moment created by the huge water colors that illustrated
the Plan of Chicago one hundred years ago, these pavilions have
served as a call to action to plan boldly and aim high," Said
Emily J. Harris, executive director of the Burnham Plan Centennial
Committee.
"The great impact of the pavilions, the sheer delight they
evoked, will be missed. On Monday both temporary structures begin
their next phase: to be deconstructed and recycled in support of
sustainable activities in the region. This is how we are kicking
off the centennial's Green Legacy week," Harris said.
The privately financed pavilions by two world renowned architects
were a partnership of the Centennial, Chicago Department of Cultural
Affairs, Art Institute of Chicago and Millennium Park Inc
The Centennial marks the 100th anniversary of the 1909 publication
of the Plan of Chicago by Daniel H. Burnham and Edward H. Bennett.
The materials from both pavilions will go to the Resource Center,
Chicago for reuse and recycling. Fabric Images of Elgin will dismantle
the Zaha Pavilion in two days. 3rd Coast Construction of Chicago
is a deconstruction contractor and will take down the UNStudio Pavilion
- built of steel and plywood - over a period of approximately three
weeks.
"Removing the materials so that they can be reused with the
lowest carbon footprint is our goal," said Dan Sheehy, principal
of 3rd Coast.
Bill Steers, President of the ArcelorMittal USA Foundation, Burnham
Pavilion steel sponsor, said, "Steel is the most recycled material
in the world - more than 250 million tons are recycled each year.
As part of our commitment to sustainability, ArcelorMittal is glad
that the steel used to make the Burnham Pavilion will be re-used
by the Resource Center."
About The Burnham Plan Centennial
The Burnham Plan Centennial includes more than 200 program partners
from the three-state region spanning from Kenosha, Wis., through
DeKalb, Ill., to Michigan City, Ind. In honor of Daniel Burnham's
1909 Plan of Chicago, this Centennial year is stirring a region-wide
community to action, working to build the best quality of life for
people and planet alike. Our region's community foundation, The
Chicago Community Trust, provided leadership funding for the Burnham
Plan Centennial, and is joined by the Elizabeth Morse and Elizabeth
Morse Genius Charitable Trusts as founding sponsors. Organizational
and staff support for the Burnham Plan Centennial Committee is provided
by Chicago Metropolis 2020.
About Millennium Park
Millennium Park is an award-winning center for art, music, architecture
and landscape design. The result of a unique partnership between
the City of Chicago and the philanthropic community, the 24.5-acre
park features the work of world-renowned architects, planners, artists
and designers. Among Millennium Park's prominent features are the
Frank Gehry-designed Jay Pritzker Pavilion, the most sophisticated
outdoor concert venue of its kind in the United States; the interactive
Crown Fountain by Jaume Plensa; the contemporary Lurie Garden designed
by the team of Gustafson Guthrie Nichol, Piet Oudolf and Robert
Israel; and Anish Kapoor's hugely popular Cloud Gate sculpture.
Since opening in July 2004, Millennium Park has hosted more than
16 million people, making it one of the most popular destinations
in Chicago.
New Photos online 24 Aug 2009
Zaha Hadid Architects pavilion design for Chicagos Burnham
Plan Centennial celebrates the citys ongoing tradition of bold
plans and big dreams.
The project encourages reinvention and improvement on an urban scale
and welcomes the future with innovative ideas and technologies whilst
referencing
the original organizational systems of Burnhams plan. Our design
continues Chicagos renowned tradition of cutting edge architecture
and
engineering, at the scale of a temporary pavilion.
The design merges new formal concepts with the memory of bold historic
urban planning. Superimpositions of spatial structures with hidden
traces of
Burnhams organizational systems and architectural representations
create unexpected results. By using methods of overlaying, complexity
is build
up and inscribed in the structure.

The pavilion is composed of an intricate bent-aluminum structure,
with each element shaped and welded in order to create its unique
curvilinear form.
Outer and inner fabric skins are wrapped tightly around the metal
frame to create the fl uid shape. The skins also serve as the screen
for video installations
to take place within the pavilion.
Zaha Hadid Architects pavilion also works within the larger
framework of the Centennial celebrations commitment to deliberate
the future of cities.
The presence of the new structure triggers the visitors intellectual
curiosity whilst an intensifi cation of public life around and within
the pavilion supports
the idea of public discourse.
The pavilion was designed and built to maximize the recycling and
re-use of the materials after its role in Millennium Park. It can
be re-installed for
future use at another site.

BURNHAM PAVILION [CHICAGO, USA]
2009
PROGRAM: Temporary pavilion to house multimedia installation
CLIENT: Burnham Plan Centennial
ARCHITECT: Zaha Hadid Architects
Design Zaha Hadid and Patrik Schumacher
Project Architect Jens Borstelmann, Thomas Vietzke
Project Team Teoman Ayas, Evan Erlebacher
LOCAL ARCHITECT: Thomas Roszak
STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS: Rockey Structures
FABRICATOR: Fabric Images
LIGHTING & ELECTRICAL: Tracey Dear
MULTIMEDIA CONTENT: The Gray Circle
4 Aug 2009
The Burnham Pavilion by Zaha Hadid Architects is officially opened
to the public in Millennium Park today, images online tomorrow
Zaha Hadid's Burnham Pavilion Open to Public
Bold structure on display in Millennium Park
CHICAGO - August 4, 2009 - The much anticipated Burnham Pavilion by
Zaha Hadid Architects (ZHA) of London, UK, has officially opened to
the public in Millennium Park. The pavilion is located next to the
UNStudio pavilion, which opened to the public on June 19. Both are
located on the park's Chase Promenade south.
More than 7,000 pieces of aluminum - no two alike - had to be individually
bent and welded to create its curvilinear form. Then thousands of
yards of fabric had to be custom tailored and tightly fit onto the
interior and exterior aluminum-tube structure. This first-of-its kind
installation stretched the limits of all involved - as a Burnham venue
properly should - and its fabrication took longer than the original
contractor expected.
"This is an artistic achievement of global proportions,"
said Burnham Plan Centennial Committee executive director Emily J.
Harris. "It is fabulous. Special thanks go to Fabric Images of
Elgin for jumping in to complete this project as envisioned by Zaha
Hadid."
Speaking from her firm's offices in London, Zaha Hadid said, "The
pavilion is a classic vehicle for architectural manifestos because
their function is not as restrictive as that of a museum or other
building. This allows the architectural concepts of the pavilion to
dominate.
"Fabric is both a traditional and a high-tech material whose
form is directly related to the forces applied to it - creating beautiful
geometries that are never arbitrary. I find this very exciting,"
said Ms. Hadid, the first female winner of the Pritzker Prize for
Architecture (2004), who plans to visit Chicago in September.
The ZHA pavilion's unique curvilinear geometries required state-of-the-art
fabric technologies executed by Fabric Images. Each piece of fabric
was individually sewn and tensioned between the aluminum ribs.
Every evening, the inner fabric's curving skin serves as the "screen"
for a sound-and-video installation by artist Thomas Gray that impressionistically
explores how the Chicago region has transformed during the past 100
years, and asks people to examine their dreams for the future. The
creative multi-channel sound track was created by Lou Mallozzi of
Experimental Sound Studio, Chicago.
- more-
Both the interior and exterior surfaces of the pavilion are bathed
in ever-changing lighting designed by Dear Productions.
The two Burnham Pavilions by world-renowned architects, Zaha Hadid
and UNStudio's Ben van Berkel serve as focal points for the future-looking
centennial of the 1909 Plan of Chicago. Their high visibility directs
the public's attention to the hundreds of exhibits, events, and other
activities presented by more than 250 Centennial Program Partners
in the three-state metro area.
The privately funded pavilions were commissioned by the Burnham Plan
Centennial Committee working in close collaboration with the City
of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, the Art Institute of Chicago,
and Millennium Park Inc. Both pavilions were designed and built to
be deconstructed and their materials re-used following the exhibit's
closing October 31. The Zaha Hadid pavilion is recyclable and can
be reconstructed for installation elsewhere.
The pavilions site is augmented by a kiosk for the public to engage
in "inventing the future" of the metropolitan Chicago region.
An interactive touch-screen installation let's people choose from
various scenarios of the choices currently facing regional planners,
and then see animations of the consequences of their choices. This
will help shape the Chicago Metropolitan Agency for Planning's (CMAP)
GoTo2040 plan to direct regional development for the next 30 years.
The kiosk also shows visitors numerous other on-going Burnham Plan
Centennial exhibits within walking distance of the pavilions.
Burnham Pavilion : Further
Information
Burnham Pavilion by UNStudio

photos courtesy of Christian Richters
Millennium Park Pavilions Chicago - Background Info

Burnham Pavilion Chicago
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Also by Zaha Hadid Architects:
Eli & Edythe Broad Art Museum, Michigan, USA

Michigan museum
Ben van Berkel of UNStudio
Chicago Architecture
Farnsworth House
Sears Tower
American Architect Studios
Illinois Architecture

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos
for the Millennium Park Pavilions Chicago Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
Millennium Park Pavilions Building : page -
adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
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