If the world needed any
more proof Belgians love beer, this temporary pavilion, built out of 33,000
plastic beer crates should clear all doubts.
Set right in front of the
iconic Atomium building, the beer crate pavilion of Brussels
was designed and built in celebration of the fiftieth anniversary of the 1958
Universal World Exhibition. Beer crates were chosen for the project, because the
architects decided their work should evoke the concepts of universality and
reusability, and nothing did that better than an ordinary item from the daily
life of an ordinary consumer.
An exercise in how a normal
item can transcend its normal purpose and become architecture, the beer crate
pavilion is made up of approximately 33,000 beer crates. It may seem like a
tough structure to build, but designers actually said the chosen material made
assembly easier and allowed them to explore architectural features like columns,
arches and domes.
As soon as the temporary
pavilion is taken down, the beer crates will go right back to transporting
bottles of delicious Belgian lager. I wonder if the designers had the “terrible”
task of emptying all the 33,000 crates of beer, before using them…
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