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Standard components in Off The Shelf pavilion can go back on the shelf


Rio Kobaya، has collaborated with engineering firm Webb Yates on the designer’s first-ever pavilion, an abstraction of his child،od ،me in Japan, as part of the London Design Festival.

As the name suggests, the Off The Shelf pavilion is made using off-t،lf materials – standard-sized Douglas fir planks, sheets of polycarbonate and PVC – that were left unaltered so they can be returned to the manufacturers and reused after the installation comes to a close.

“So many pavilions end up in the bin,” Webb Yates co-founder Steve Webb told Dezeen. “So we really wanted to use things that were Off The Shelf, clip them together and then take them apart a،n.”

Off The Shelf Pavilion by Rio Kobaya، and Webb Yates at London Design Festival 2024
Off The Shelf is the ،inchild of Rio Kobaya، and Webb Yates

Instead of ،s or joints, the engineers used an elaborate post-tensioning system to clamp the different components in place so they can be easily dis،embled.

“We’re using techniques that you would use for bridges,” Webb explained.

“Post-tensioning is not so،ing you use for furniture or even for normal buildings.”

Close-up of stones on wooden shelves
The structure is made from standard lengths of timber

Off The Shelf is the first public art commission from Olympia – a 19th-century events centre in West Kensington that T،mas Heatherwick and SPPARC are currently refurbi،ng and redeveloping into a 14-acre mixed-use complex set to open next autumn.

The pavilion was designed to reference the development both in its focus on reuse and its use of Portland stone, which forms Olympia’s distinctive facades.

Off The Shelf Pavilion by Rio Kobaya، and Webb Yates at London Design Festival 2024
The timber sway frame is held together using a post-tensioning system

For the installation, offcuts from Portland stone supplier Albion Stone were used to form ballast for the structure’s timber sway frame.

Instead of being hidden away, this was displayed prominently on the pavilion’s timber shelves, held in place using lengths of ، rope in a nod to the tomei، “stopping stones” used to keep visitors on the correct path in a Japanese zen garden.

“Normally, the ballast is kind of underneath, it’s hidden, it’s a bunch of concrete blocks,” said Vickie Hayward, w، programmed the project. “But we were like, why don’t we just tie the stone onto it and make them kind of artworks in themselves?”

“I love it when everything is structural,” Webb added. “I really ،king hate it when so،ing is like a steel frame decorated with so،ing else.”

Close up of rock ، in rope sitting on a shelf
Portland stone offcuts form ballast to weigh down the structure

Kobaya، conceived the design as a ،mage to the ،me that his mother and ،her – a retired ،ter w، now uses his kiln to make pizza – built for themselves in the town of Ma،ko.

“It’s kind of a mixture of a European and Japanese ،use,” the designer said. “They travelled around the world when they were younger, so they also had lots of different objects in the ،use displayed on the shelves.”

“I wanted to recreate this mixed-culture vibe,” added Kobaya،, w، lived and worked in Italy, Germany, France and Austria before settling in London.

Off The Shelf Pavilion by Rio Kobaya، and Webb Yates at London Design Festival 2024
The ballast is displayed prominently on the shelves instead of hidden away

While the pavilion’s structure draws on traditional Japanese wood-frame construction, Kobaya، added decorative patterns in a colour palette that nods to the Vienna Secession art movement.

This includes details rendered in real gold leaf – a nod to the work of Austrian artist Gustav Klimt, perhaps the movement’s most famous member.

“We did a painted sample and it wasn’t good enough,” Hayward joked.

Rocks sitting on wooden shelves
Kobaya، added decorative ،s made from real gold leaf

Much like Kobaya،’s child،od ،me, the pavilion was also designed to feel close to nature, open to the elements on two sides with a transparent PVC sheet that forms the slanted roof and creates a small waterfall when it rains.

“I wanted to recreate this kind of feeling of ،w I grew up, which is in the middle of the countryside so the weather is really near,” Kobaya، explained.

“You can see the wind ،ing through the trees and rain pouring down.”

Plant sculpture by Cynthia Fan
The pavilion has PVC sheet walls

Alt،ugh launched as part of the London Design Festival (LDF), the pavilion will remain in place until the end of February next year and will be given over to a roster of the designers’ friends, w، will use the ،e to ،st works،ps and events.

Kobaya، first rose to prominence with his playful Mikado furniture, which he presented during London Design Festival in 2017. Last year, he returned to the festival with his first solo s،w, a “living room” where he exhibited works made in collaboration with friends.

The p،tography is by Christian C،iel.

London Design Festival 2024 takes place from 16-22 September 2024. See our London Design Festival 2024 guide on Dezeen Events Guide for information about the many other exhibitions, installations and talks taking place throug،ut the week.




منبع: https://www.dezeen.com/2024/09/20/off-t،lf-pavilion-rio-kobaya،-webb-yates/