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Art Fund Pavilion Competition, Architecture, Design, Image, Winner, News
The Art Fund Pavilion Architecture Competition
Tina Manis Associates Wins Contest for The Lightbox, London, UK
Art Fund Pavilion News Update
13 Aug 2009
Construction postponed to Spring 2010, going straight to the Lightbox
and therefore not being used by Tent London for this September's London
Design Festival
Art Fund Pavilion : Competition Winner - Tina Manis Associates,
USA
6 Apr 2009

The design approach for the Art Fund Pavilion project was to meet
the demands of the program: complex interaction with artwork, the
intimacy of discourse, and the inclusiveness of social gathering,
by opening and elevating what would be the typical art box
into a dynamic and interactive art container.
Through a simple strategy to split a single floor plane
into a series of ramps, a new interior topography was created which
also serves as the primary structural pattern for the
building. The pattern is mirrored at the ceiling plane, oriented to
the two key entries of the Lightbox site and then flipped to create
a reciprocal series of planes at the ceiling.
The resultant structure engages the public through its diverse perspectives
and experiences, from the circulation on platforms at varying levels
to the fans of light that allow viewers to gaze out from the inside
and vice versa. The visitors are invited to develop a relationship
with the art while also engaging with the surrounding environment.
Art Fund Pavilion Competition Shortlist
18 Mar 2009
Tent London and The Lightbox are delighted to announce the shortlist
for
The Art Fund Pavilion architecture competition. The competition received
an overwhelming level of interest with over 600 entries from 52 countries,
including Columbia, Georgia and Iran.
Applicants were asked to design a semi-permanent pavilion, which will
serve as additional gallery space for The Lightbox. The museum and
gallery, which is already housed in a RIBA Award-winning building
by Marks Barfield Architects, have decided to mark their award of
the £100,000 Art Fund Prize by investing in architecture again
by initiating and financing this competition.
The Art Fund Pavilion Competition entries were reviewed by an elite
panel of judges that included the Director of The Architecture Foundation,
Sarah Ichioka and the Turner-Prize nominated artist, Richard Wilson.
Art Fund Pavilion Architecture Competition - Shortlisted Entries:
- AREA [Architecture Research Athens], Greece
- Feix & Merlin Architects with Martin Stockley Associates, UK
- IN & EDIT Architecture, France
- Karim Muallem, UK
- Tina Manis Associates, USA
The shortlisted entries and other applications that demonstrate the
range of work submitted to the competition will be exhibited at The
Lightbox from 31 March - 12 April 2009 and the winner will be announced
on the 6 April 2009.
The winning entry will be engineered and constructed by Facit and
shown as part of Tent London during the London Design Festival 2009,
before taking up residence at The Lightbox.
Art Fund Pavilion Architecture Competition Shortlist, alphabetical:
AREA, Greece

“We believe that good architecture operates within the given parameters
to transform abstract building systems into specific material investigations.
Projects acquire meaning when they relate to their site and their
community, both through form and program. We see the Art Fund Pavilion
as an important opportunity to offer its community a new place of
exploration and social enjoyment.” AREA
Feix&Merlin, UK

“The Lightbox have created a fantastic opportunity for a wonderful
piece of micro-architecture, and we hope to give them a pavilion that
is high impact but low-cost, one that is sustainable and efficient
in its use of materials, flexible in its architecture, and ultimately
a pavilion that has a bit of magic about it, a bit of intrigue, and
almost certainly some naughtiness.” Feix&Merlin Architects with Martin
Stockley Associates
IN & EDIT, France

“The Art Fund Pavilion competition has been a great opportunity for
IN&EDIT to pursue our reflections on postindustrialized sustainable
issues. By using continuous variations on a standard pattern, we propose
to use the full possibilities of a computerized controlled process:
optimized wood cutting allowing each piece to be different. The assembly
of the pre-mounted elements like a 3D puzzle, will reveal a sustainable,
ludic, inviting, segmented and yet a continuous structure.” IN & EDIT
Architecture
Karim Muallem, UK

“Complexity in design need not be always in the complexity of the
form but rather in the complexity of its responsiveness. Clever designs
are not always about the elaborateness of the shape but rather in
there adaptability. The idea was to start with a simple unassertive
compact box, and through a process of responsive transformation triggered
by crowd movement and function alterations end up with a highly adaptable
and exiting form.” Karim Muallem
Tina Manis Associates, USA

“It’s difficult to ignore the global scale of financial crisis that
engulfs us at this time. And in this particularly rich time of global
economic shifts, architecture and creative thinking has the opportunity
to be at its highest. Often, conflict coincides with true invention
and in order to make the most of these moments, we should return to
the elemental disciplines in life that make it wonderful; such as
art.” Tina Manis Associates
Art Fund Pavilion Architecture Competition Judges - Quotes
The unprecedented level of interest in this competition may
be attributed to a global slowdown being experienced by many professional
practices and the special interest associated with the prospect of
designing a public building/space, be
it even a small public space - a definite tick box on most architects
list of dream projects. Jimmy MacDonald, Tent London
When we established this competition, we hoped it would stimulate
interest from designers, but hardly imagined that it would receive
this kind of global recognition. It is also wonderful that professionals
take The Lightbox seriously and want to be involved with our award-winning
building. Marilyn Scott, Director, The Lightbox
Along with the other members of the jury, I was impressed by
entrants' rigour and inventiveness in meeting the competition brief,
and I am particularly delighted that the shortlisted entries represent
a wide range of international practice. Sarah Ichioka, Director,
The Architecture Foundation
The response to this competition - a really imaginative use
of The Art Fund Prize by The Lightbox - has been astonishing, both
for the number and variety of entries and their creativity. It was
difficult to select just five, and any one of them could be a worthy
winner, which makes the task of making the final choice a real challenge.
One thing is for sure whichever design is chosen, The Art Fund
Pavilion is going to be a new jewel in the crown won for Woking by
The Lightbox. David Barrie, Director, The Art Fund
The Facit team was really impressed with the quality of applicants
for The Art Fund Pavilion. The shortlisted entries cover a wide variety
of methods to which our system can be applied. This has been a great
opportunity for us to see how others interpret our design approach
to CNC technology in architecture. The five finalists illustrate the
diversity to which our system can be applied, and we look forward
to producing the winning structure. Dominic McLausland, Facit
Art Fund Pavilion Architecture Competition infomration from the
Architecture Foundation Mar 2009
Tiananmen
Square Contest
Whitechapel Gallery Building
Serpentine
Gallery Pavilion
AA Summer Pavilion
squatcity design
competition
Art Fund Pavilion - Information from the Competition Winner
TINA MANIS ASSOCIATES shortlisted for Art Fund Pavilion in London,
UK
Release from Tina Manis Associates 18 Mar 2009
The Art Fund Pavilion open competition presented by Tent London and
the Lightbox, has publicly selected Tina Manis Associates submission
as one of its five shortlisted projects. The annual competition, sponsored
by the Lightbox Museums £100,000 Art Fund Prize, brought
in over 600 hundred submissions from 52 countries for a semi-permanent
pavilion. TMAs entry was the only selected finalist representing
the United States. The winners Pavilion will be engineered and
constructed by Facit and shown as part of Tent London during the London
Design Festival 2009, before taking up residence at The Lightbox as
additional gallery space.
Art Fund Pavilion - Entry
Sjölander da Cruz Architects

The pavilion embraces its context and invites people into its volume
with a series of physically and visually permeable facades. Physical
continuity is provided through each end of the structure; one end
at a human scale which relates to the access of the Lightbox
gallery; and the other provides a point of departure from the confines
of enclosure to the openness of the greater context.
The dynamic roof and wall lines create a graduating perception of
scale, enclosure and ultimately shelter. Openings within the walls
and roof are flexible, allowing adaptation for visual interaction
between the open and enclosed space; accommodation of large art works;
and the creation of a bespoke pavilion tailored to the needs of each
site.
An integrated lighting system provides the flexible performance required
and creates a warm glow from inside to out, through an enveloping
translucent recycled plastic skin.
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