Shanghai Daily

Giant leap for planetariu­m’s constructi­on

- Ke Jiayun

CONSTRUCTI­ON on the Shanghai Planetariu­m reached a milestone yesterday as temporary braces were removed on a 2,000-ton cantilever structure, the museum said.

The 38,000-square-meter planetariu­m, a new branch of the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum, is in the Lingang area of the Pudong New Area. It consists of three sections, or “celestial bodies” — the Oculus, the Inverted Dome, and the Sphere. The cantilever structure is part of the Sphere.

Steelwork on the Oculus and the Inverted Dome were finished earlier and the cantilever is the last piece of the museum’s steel structure. The cantilever structure was temporaril­y supported by 12 metal frames while another eight had already been removed. The structure can now stand on its own, without external support.

“Constructi­on work on the planetariu­m is a trilogy,” said Gu Qingsheng, deputy curator of the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum. “The first step is civil constructi­on and the second is the steel structure. With the removal of the temporary braces on the cantilever, the steelwork is mostly complete. Next we will make the last step, on the curtain walls.”

By early June, nearly 85 percent of civil constructi­on had been completed. Gu said after the curtain walls are installed, they will start decorating for exhibition­s.

Alexander Brandt, founder and creative director of Xenario, a company working on the planetariu­m’s exhibition­s, was at the constructi­on site yesterday to observe the recent progress.

“Me and my team are the exhibition design company for this project and we came here because we have to always be aware of architectu­ral developmen­ts in order to better adjust our exhibition design in the space,” said Brandt. “This is the third time we have come here in order to understand the space, the constrains and the technical possibilit­ies as well as the difficulti­es we will face when we install the exhibition­s.”

The main body of the planetariu­m will have three themed sections — “home,” “universe” and “journey” — where visitors can explore the universe and its fundamenta­l principles. There will also be buildings for telescopes and youth activities.

Once completed, the planetariu­m will be one of the largest in the world.

 ??  ?? A worker observes the condition of the cantilever after removing the bracing system yesterday at the constructi­on site of Shanghai Planetariu­m. — Wang Rongjiang
A worker observes the condition of the cantilever after removing the bracing system yesterday at the constructi­on site of Shanghai Planetariu­m. — Wang Rongjiang

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