See What NYC's Night Sky Would Look Like Without Light Pollution...in NYC
MORE FROM ARCHITIZER:
Lush Life: Taller Sau Wins Barcelona Competition With Verdant Pedestrian Bridge
Building Of The Day: An Incognito Power Station, Hidden Behind A Screen Of Green
WTF! Acrobatic Dancers To Twirl Down Libeskind’s New Tower In Toronto
Created as a part of the Dumbo Arts Festival, the "Skylights: Dumbo" pavilion is a site-specific sculpture situated in Brooklyn Bridge Park. The pavilion was initially conceptualized by NYU students Adrià Navarro López and Engin Ayaz as part of the final project for the Interactive Telecommunications Program (ITP) course Sculpting Data into Everyday Objects. The project sets out to address the “politics of light,” exploring the side effects of light pollution in urban settings.
Designed with programmatic constraints in mind, the organically shaped pavilion responds to the orientation, views, and shadow paths of the structure. Other factors including the location and even the perforations in the canopy helped to create a complete star map of New York for the evenings of September 28, 29, and 30, during the Dumbo Arts Festival.
Expanding on the actual process behind the pavilion, the design team has explained, “By using the streetlight as the source for the star map, the project challenges the visitor to reconnect with the larger planetary scale, the stars that enshroud us.” The designers are currently looking for a longer-term exhibition location for their pavilion.





This post originally appeared on Architizer, an Atlantic partner site.



Visit This Kaleidoscopic Water Tower
Mega-Art of the Day: A Face the Size of 2 Football Fields
New York Unveils a Gigantic Group Swing
A Christmas 'Tree' That Projects Videos, Lights, Even Sound