logo
Bahrain wins top prize at Venice Architecture Biennale with a pavilion tackling extreme heat

Bahrain wins top prize at Venice Architecture Biennale with a pavilion tackling extreme heat

Yahoo13-05-2025

The Venice Architecture Biennale, one of the most prestigious events in the world of architecture, has officially launched.
Taking place every two years, countries from around the globe are invited to showcase their most innovative and thought-provoking ideas about architecture in national pavilions - this time around the theme of 'Intelligens: Natural. Artificial. Collective.'
This year, the Bahrain Pavilion, located in the historic Artiglierie of the Arsenale, has won the coveted Golden Lion award for Best National Participation with its installation titled "Heatwave".
Suspended above a relaxed public seating area, Heatwave features a hovering square-shaped ceiling supported by chains from a central column. More than just a visual spectacle, the structure offers climate-responsive cooling, designed to make public space more habitable in a period of intensifying heatwaves.
Engineered by Mario Monotti with thermomechanical input from Alexander Puzrin, the installation explores modular climate infrastructure. While a geothermal well and solar chimney were originally proposed to create a self-sustaining microclimate, excavation wasn't feasible at the Biennale site - so mechanical ventilation was used instead to simulate the architect's intended cooling effect.
Accepting the award, pavilion commissioner Shaikh Khalifa Bin Ahmed Al Khalifa noted, "The term heatwave is a very common term we hear in the media, in news and even amongst our conversations at home. It is a stress to our urban centres and local communities, and the pavilion aimed to address those issues through an innovative technique."
Two other standout pavilions were also acknowledged by the jury.
The Holy See's 'Opera aperta' showcase, housed in a deconsecrated Venetian church in the Castello district, received a special mention for transforming the space into an evolving site of collective care, restoration, and dialogue, inspired by Italian philospher Umberto Eco's 1962 book "Open Work (Opera aperta)".
Part construction site, part community centre - over seven months, it will host restoration workshops, shared meals, and music rehearsals, bringing together international architects, local artisans, students, and social collectives.
And rather than concealing damage, the team will carefully trace the building's cracks, mold, and weathering - viewing them not as flaws, but as evidence of life, history, and possibility.
The British Pavilion also earned a special mention for its powerful examination of architecture and its links to colonisation.
Titled 'GBR: Geology of Britannic Repair', the exhibition is a UK-Kenya collaboration led by curators Kabage Karanja and Stella Mutegi (Cave_bureau, Nairobi), Owen Hopkins, and Professor Kathryn Yusoff, and seeks to explore whether architecture can shift from being an extractive force to one of repair and restitution.
"With the Great Rift Valley as the exhibition's geological and conceptual focus, we have brought together a series of installations that propose 'other architectures' defined by their relationship to the ground, their resistance to conventional, extractive ways of working, and that are resilient in the face of climate breakdown and social and political upheaval" says the curatorial team.
The Venice Architecture Biennale runs until 23 November 2025.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

LS Gomma Fills a Venetian Palazzo With Rubberized Furniture
LS Gomma Fills a Venetian Palazzo With Rubberized Furniture

Hypebeast

time21-05-2025

  • Hypebeast

LS Gomma Fills a Venetian Palazzo With Rubberized Furniture

Paris-based designerLS Gommahas revealed a series of new works in Venice, in a show titled 'Heavy Reticello'.⁠⁠Presented by London'sMax Radford Gallery, the exhibition opened alongside the beginning of the Venice Architecture Biennale. Its title comes from the reticello patterns seen in lacework and glassblowing, but in LS Gomma's work, these types of grids are created through the use of metal mesh, which is then covered in rubber material. ⁠⁠'The connection between LS Gomma's practice and some of that of the Murano glassworks meant that showing a body of their works felt like the natural decision for what we might exhibit,' says London-based Radford.⁠ Opening in time for the wider Venice Biennale, the show will take place in and around the Palazzo Contarini della Porta di Ferro, and will feature seating and lighting crafted from the rubber and metal mesh material combination the Paris-based designer has become known for.⁠⁠His chairs, bench, and lights set to be displayed at the show have all been hand-crafted in the designer's studio. ⁠'They embrace a similar lattice-like complexity, suggesting a heavy, tactile version of the once ethereal technique. In this way, 'Heavy Reticello' becomes both homage and evolution—translating historical craftsmanship into a bold material language rooted in experimentation and physicality,' the gallery adds.⁠ Heavy Reticello was on show until May 18. The furniture is now available to purchase through the gallery, with prices available on request.

Princess Charlene Wears an Elegant Elie Saab Dress to Pope Leo's Inauguration
Princess Charlene Wears an Elegant Elie Saab Dress to Pope Leo's Inauguration

Yahoo

time18-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Princess Charlene Wears an Elegant Elie Saab Dress to Pope Leo's Inauguration

Monaco's Prince Albert and Princess Charlene sat front row at Pope Leo XIV's papal inauguration on Sunday. The Princess wore an embroidered powder white dress by Elie Saab with a scalloped hemline and A-line silhouette, matched with white heels and a white lace veil. Typically, only Catholic queens are permitted to wear white to the inaugural mass, and as Monaco is a principality, the crown princess is permitted as well. Prince Albert responded quickly to the announcement of Pope Leo as the 267th leader of the Roman Catholic Church, writing on Instagram on May 9, 'On the occasion of Your Holiness's elevation to the Pontifical Throne, my family and I assure You of our fervent prayers for the greatness of Your Pontificate and humbly offer our respectful congratulations. Together with the people of the Principality, we express our deepest hope that the fulfillment of this eminent and weighty spiritual mission of universal scope will be marked by many satisfactions. I ask Your Holiness to kindly accept the respectful homage of my deep and filial devotion.' As Catholic royals, the Monégasque family has long maintained close ties to the Holy See. The royal couple issued condolences to social media for Pope Francis immediately following his death and attended his funeral last month. They had been present at Pope Francis's papal inauguration in 2013 and met with him at the Apostolic Palace in Vatican City in 2013, 2016, and 2022. Princess Charlene converted prior to her marriage to Albert in 2011, in keeping with the state religion of Monaco, and is one of only seven women granted "the privilege of the white"—a permission given to Catholic queen, allowing them to wear a white lace veil in the pope's presence, as opposed to the black version required of most women. (And since Monaco is a principality, this privilege is extended to the princess consort.) The inauguration of Pope Leo could be seen as extra poignant for Prince Albert given he is also part-American through his mother, the late Princess Grace. Pope Leo XIV, born Robert Francis Prevost, is the first American pontiff, born in Chicago in 1955. You Might Also Like 12 Weekend Getaway Spas For Every Type of Occasion 13 Beauty Tools to Up Your At-Home Facial Game

Bahrain wins top prize at Venice Architecture Biennale with a pavilion tackling extreme heat
Bahrain wins top prize at Venice Architecture Biennale with a pavilion tackling extreme heat

Yahoo

time13-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Bahrain wins top prize at Venice Architecture Biennale with a pavilion tackling extreme heat

The Venice Architecture Biennale, one of the most prestigious events in the world of architecture, has officially launched. Taking place every two years, countries from around the globe are invited to showcase their most innovative and thought-provoking ideas about architecture in national pavilions - this time around the theme of 'Intelligens: Natural. Artificial. Collective.' This year, the Bahrain Pavilion, located in the historic Artiglierie of the Arsenale, has won the coveted Golden Lion award for Best National Participation with its installation titled "Heatwave". Suspended above a relaxed public seating area, Heatwave features a hovering square-shaped ceiling supported by chains from a central column. More than just a visual spectacle, the structure offers climate-responsive cooling, designed to make public space more habitable in a period of intensifying heatwaves. Engineered by Mario Monotti with thermomechanical input from Alexander Puzrin, the installation explores modular climate infrastructure. While a geothermal well and solar chimney were originally proposed to create a self-sustaining microclimate, excavation wasn't feasible at the Biennale site - so mechanical ventilation was used instead to simulate the architect's intended cooling effect. Accepting the award, pavilion commissioner Shaikh Khalifa Bin Ahmed Al Khalifa noted, "The term heatwave is a very common term we hear in the media, in news and even amongst our conversations at home. It is a stress to our urban centres and local communities, and the pavilion aimed to address those issues through an innovative technique." Two other standout pavilions were also acknowledged by the jury. The Holy See's 'Opera aperta' showcase, housed in a deconsecrated Venetian church in the Castello district, received a special mention for transforming the space into an evolving site of collective care, restoration, and dialogue, inspired by Italian philospher Umberto Eco's 1962 book "Open Work (Opera aperta)". Part construction site, part community centre - over seven months, it will host restoration workshops, shared meals, and music rehearsals, bringing together international architects, local artisans, students, and social collectives. And rather than concealing damage, the team will carefully trace the building's cracks, mold, and weathering - viewing them not as flaws, but as evidence of life, history, and possibility. The British Pavilion also earned a special mention for its powerful examination of architecture and its links to colonisation. Titled 'GBR: Geology of Britannic Repair', the exhibition is a UK-Kenya collaboration led by curators Kabage Karanja and Stella Mutegi (Cave_bureau, Nairobi), Owen Hopkins, and Professor Kathryn Yusoff, and seeks to explore whether architecture can shift from being an extractive force to one of repair and restitution. "With the Great Rift Valley as the exhibition's geological and conceptual focus, we have brought together a series of installations that propose 'other architectures' defined by their relationship to the ground, their resistance to conventional, extractive ways of working, and that are resilient in the face of climate breakdown and social and political upheaval" says the curatorial team. The Venice Architecture Biennale runs until 23 November 2025.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store