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Architecture Week: Convoys and condoms

14 Oct 2009
Auckland’s first ever 'architecture convoy' and a structure made out of 2500 condoms feature as p

Auckland’s first ever 'architecture convoy' and a structure made out of 2500 condoms feature as part of The University of Auckland’s contribution to Auckland Architecture Week 2009.

Auckland Architecture Week (11-18 October) is an annual celebration that includes exhibitions, movies and discussions covering a range of topics that fit broadly within the field of architecture and the built environment. Venues for activities are in and around the Auckland Central Business District.

One hundred and twenty students from The University of Auckland’s School of Architecture and Planning will compete in “TRANS-FoRM-ers”, a competition based on the design and fabrication of “mobile architectures”.

Inspired by the question “How might design, architecture and art respond to the relentless fluidity of people, capital, data, ideas and commodity goods?” the competing teams will create forms that will comprise an architecture convoy, at 5pm on Friday October 16, that moves from Western Springs to Grey Lynn, Karangahape Road and Queen St.

Arriving at Shed 12 (90 Wellesley Street West), a main venue for Architecture Week, these mobile architectures will undergo transformation, revealing an interior that will be exhibited and experienced by the public. The projects, which are currently under construction, range across experimental materials and super scales, from giant silver vibrating balloons to collapsible cardboard towers.

“Construct” is another University of Auckland creation comprising 2500 condoms and made expressly for the launch of Auckland Architecture Week. Described as a “fun, modular, building system [that turns] the observer into the participant” the installation asks the public “Are YOU more creative than an architect?”

“This is an important project for the second year students. They are required to realise something at a large scale that they then must show in public—that requires them to be very resourceful. As a group initiative, they also need to become skilled at negotiation and collaboration, both useful skills in the training of an architect,” says Kathy Waghorn, a senior tutor in the School of Architecture and Planning at the National Institute of Creative Arts and Industries (NICAI).

Image: The University of Auckland "Team Nom" (second year students Howard Kang, Frances Lowe, Ash Low and Melanie Pau) test the lighting on a small scale mock up of their TRANS-FORM-ers project. The project works like a large land based parachute, capturing air as it
is thrown up into the air by a group of participants.

More information 

TRANS-FoRM-ers

Construct

Auckland Architecture Week

The University of Auckland’s National Institute of Creative Arts and Industries comprises the School of Architecture and Planning, Elam School of Fine Arts, the Centre for New Zealand Art Research and Discovery (CNZARD), the School of Music and the Dance Studies Programme.