HQ
Architects developed a wonderful public installation that provides an artistic
aesthetic to the environment through playfully responsive design. The Warde
project, located in Jerusalem's Vallero Square an urban area that's in really
bad condition is being given a set of towering flower sculptures, big adequate
to draw the gaze of the whole plaza. So, rather than fighting against the
marketplace's metropolitan nature, designers sought to work in accord with the
municipality. These massive blossoms are motion-activated, which means that
they bloom when pedestrians walk by or when trolleys arrive. To flawlessly
describe their installation, HQ Architects says, the urban space abruptly
reacts to the people using it therefore; people can also utilize the flowers
for shade from the sun or for light when dark time’s approaches. Moreover, once
the square is no longer busy with people, the flowers wilt and close, their
lively petals resting until the next surge of action within their vicinity
inspire them to bloom once more.
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