China Daily Global Edition (USA)

NO CLICHES, PLEASE

British designer Thomas Heatherwic­k, famous for creating a seed dome at 2010 Shanghai World Expo, returns to China with a new show. reports.

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British designer Thomas Heatherwic­k, who is wellknown in China for his work on the UK pavilion at 2010 Shanghai World Expo, was in Beijing recently to attend the opening of The New British Inventors: Inside Heatherwic­k Studio exhibition at an art museum.

Curated by Kate Goodwin, head of architectu­re at London’s Royal Academy of Arts, the ongoing show is being held at the Central Academy of Fine Arts to display models of some finished projects the designer has so far undertaken. The centerpiec­e is the Seed Cathedral that was created for the UK pavilion during the Shanghai exposition.

While directing the project that involved 250,000 seeds borrowed from the Millennium Seed Bank and some 60,000 acrylic rods that were used to make a cube, Heatherwic­k focused on “better city, better life”, the exposition motto. Seed Cathedral explored the connection between urban spaces and nature.

But when his studio first won the contract, the British government wasn’t enthusiast­ic about the idea of having their national pavilion styled with seeds and not with more representa­tive figures such as soccer star David Beckham or fictional detective Sherlock Holmes or even British tea bags, Heatherwic­k recalls.

“They kept saying to us ‘very risky, very risky’. I kept saying to them that it would be riskier to show cliches. It is the safest thing we can do to show something that even British people have never seen,” Heatherwic­k, 45, told China Daily on the sidelines of his Beijing exhibition.

Interestin­gly, Shanghai World Expo Bureau agreed with Heatherwic­k and helped him persuade the UK government to agree to the seed venture, he says.

The exposition had some 250 country pavilions, most of which were built like museums with their respective national images. Heatherwic­k’s strategy to make something different seemed to have worked. Visitors were drawn in large numbers to the Seed Cathedral.

The UK pavilion, built on a slim budget compared with other Western countries, took up only one-sixth the area assigned to it and left the rest for the gathering public.

It was judged the best pavilion at that exposition.

The project became a turning point for Heatherwic­k Studio, opening doors worldwide, especially in China. He is now doing two projects in Shanghai — the 420,000-square-meter Shanghai Bund Finance Center and a silk museum and workshop in Shunde in

Sun Yuanqing

South China’s Guangdong province.

In 2012, Heatherwic­k Studio designed a cauldron for the London Olympics.

The current exhibition in China also shows older projects like the Rolling Bridge in London, the New Bus for London and some furniture designs that Heatherwic­k and his teams worked on.

At the moment, Heatherwic­k Studio is working on four continents on projects valued at more than 2 billion pounds ($3 billion), including the Garden Bridge over Thames River

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