Wendy: The slick partyscape designed to clean New York's air
Wendy will rise above the courtyard at MoMA's PS1 in Queens, New York this summer
This summer, Wendy will be tidying up the neighborhood in Queens, New
York. The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) will be attempting to clean the
air in style at its PS1 satellite location with an outdoor architectural
project that's designed to provide shade, shelter and water while also
plucking pollutants out of the sky.
Wendy's spiky arms aren't just a dramatic piece of eye candy - the
fabric skin is treated with titanium dioxide nanoparticles that
neutralize airborne pollutants. HWKN, the architectural firm behind the
project, says this summer Wendy will clean the air to the equivalent of
removing 260 cars from the road.
The firm says that while her air-cleaning qualities are sure to
garner some attention, "Wendy's real beauty is on the inside – behind
Wendy there is a very complex structural system. 5,478 elements, 345
hours of calculations."
The entire structure will be supported by a scaffolding system 70 feet square (21.3 meters) and 45 feet (13.7 meters) tall.
HWKN won MoMA's annual Young Architect's Program to develop a
temporary, outdoor installation at MoMA PS1 in Queens that provides
shade, seating, and water. Elements of sustainability and recycling were
also required to be part of the design, which will ultimately serve as a
"partyscape" backdrop for a series of summer outdoor concerts at PS1.
According to the official program from PS1:
"Wendy sits far enough away from the stage used for the annual Warm
Up events to let the concerts go on unimpeded, but close enough to the
entrance to create a filter and initial impact to visitors. It bridges
over the walls into the large and small courtyards of MoMA PS1."
Wendy will be at MoMA PS1 from June 28 to September 8, 2012.
You can take a brief virtual tour of Wendy in the video below.
Source: Meet Wendy via Fast Company