![]() ![]() The project was constructed by Bond architecture staff and students in the workshop and also foyer of the Abedian School of Architecture and then transferred to Sydney, where 21 architecture students from the University of NSW, University of Sydney and UTS helped to assemble it on site. The geometric architectural installation is a complex structure made up of 380 individual cells that each perform a slightly different function so that the surface can curve in different directions. Throughout the Festival, which runs from 23 May to 9 June, it will be viewed by an estimated 800,000 festival-goers as part of the Vivid Light Walk that extends from the Opera House around Circular Quay to The Rocks area.Ĭellular Tessellation will be made available for sale after its showing at Vivid and the Bond team is hoping it will eventually find a home on the Gold Coast. “On Friday, Saturday and Sunday nights there was a queue of 100 people or more waiting to get inside and experience our pavilion.” The public response to our installation has been overwhelming,” said Assistant Professor Chris Knapp from the Bond University Abedian School of Architecture. The S-shaped pavilion measuring 9 metres long and up to 3.3 metres high is proving to be one of the stand-out attractions of the 2014 Vivid Light Festival, which on opening night alone attracted an estimated 100,000 people. ![]() After almost 12 months planning, Bond’s Architecture teachers and students have finally seen their light installation, Cellular Tessellation, come to life at Sydney’s Vivid Light Festival. ![]()
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