The Danish Pavilion for Expo 2010 by Bjarke Ingels Group
Copenhagen-based Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG), designed the Danish Pavilion for the 2010 World Expo in Shanghai, China.
Full description after the photos….

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Photography by Iwan Baan, Hanne Hvattun, and Leif Orkelbog-Andresen
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Description of the Danish Pavilion for Expo 2010 by Bjarke Ingels Group:
The Danish pavilion does not only exhibit the Danish virtues. Through interaction, the visitors are able to actually experience some of Copenhagen’s best attractions – the city bike, the harbor bath, the playground and the picnic.
The bike is a popular mean of transportation and a national symbol – common to Denmark and China. In recent years, however, it has had a very different fate in the two countries. While Copenhagen is striving to become the world’s leading bike city, heavy motor traffic is on the rise in Shanghai, where the car has become a symbol of wealth.
At the Danish Pavilion we relaunch the bike in Shanghai as a symbol of modern lifestyle and sustainable urban development. The Pavilion and the entire exhibition can be experienced on city bikes that are free for the guests to use. The building is designed as a double spiral with pedestrian and cycle lanes taking you from the ground and through curves up to a level of 12 metres and down again. In this way you can experience the Danish exhibition both inside and outside at two speeds – as calm stroll with time to absorb the surroundings or as a bicycle trip, where the city and city life drift past
Both Shanghai and Copenhagen are harbor cities. The polluting activities in the Copenhagen harbors have been replaced by harbor parks and cultural institutions, as the result, the water has become clean enough to swim in. In the heart of the pavilion the guests will find the Harbour Pool. Children can dapple their feet in the water and thus experience how it is like to live in a Danish city where the water in the harbour is clean. In the middle of The Harbour Pool, The Little Mermaid is sitting exactly as she usually sits in Copenhagen. The original Mermaid is visiting China as a concrete example of the idea that the Danish pavilion contains the real experience of the Danish city life.
While The Little Mermaid is in Shanghai, her place in Langeline will be occupied by an art work created by the internationally recognized Chinese artist Ai Weise who among other things worked as a consultant on Bird’s Nest, the national Olympic stadium in Beijing.
The pavilion is constructed as a monolithic self-supporting construction in white-painted steel, manufactured at a Chinese shipyard. Synthetic light-blue coating used in Denmark for bicycle paths will cover the roof. Inside, the floor will appear in epoxy, the light-blue bycycle path respectively.
The sequence of events at the exhibition takes place between two parallel facades – the internal and external. The internal is closed and contains different functions of the pavilion. The width varies and is defined by the programme of the inner space. The external facade, pavilion’s façade outwards, is made of perforated steel. In the evening time, the indoor activity of the pavilion will be illuminated for passers-by.
The Danish artist Jeppe Hein has designed a ‘social bench’ that will run alongside the bicycle lane. In some places, the bench adapts to its environment elastically and different functions are added such as a bar for food and drink.
Visit the Bjarke Ingels Group website – here.
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hind abdel moneim on 07 May 2010 at 7:38 am #
Its marvelous sustainable exhibition design
Axel Hein on 07 May 2010 at 7:46 am #
Astounding. Scandinavia is becoming THE reference for a society where sustainability, creativity and fair trade are present in every level of society, in every business not matter how big or small. And luckily, these values are already present in today´s childen and future decision makers. Remarkable policies with its expected results.
Arcadio Naranjo on 08 May 2010 at 1:34 pm #
C o N G R a T u L a T i o N S !
very inspiring…
Thanks.-
MaggieH Liu on 10 May 2010 at 12:57 am #
It looks amazing, so fresh so green. I hope they don’t destroy it after the Expo.
bidmyreno.com on 10 May 2010 at 3:41 pm #
Wow, I love Scandanavian design due to its typical organic lines, great use of real materials and clean aesthetic. This pavillion is like an advertisement for a country with good taste!
Shaun Boyte on 12 May 2010 at 7:31 am #
Beautiful. Stunning. Well said bidmyreno – this is an incredible advertisement for the country.
Nilkanth Gothi on 12 May 2010 at 11:15 pm #
It is a good contemporary design, good concept
Danny in Miami on 28 May 2010 at 10:44 pm #
*spectacular. simply spectacular*
*exquisite yet family-friandly*
*wish we had that level of societal understanding of the built environment here*
Bent-Erik Munch on 22 Jun 2010 at 1:04 pm #
Excellent, stylish with danish cultur and substainable, really nice and clever put together, great respect for the group, who done several other great works
Norvik Arin Setareh on 15 Sep 2010 at 7:01 pm #
Does anybody know where or how i can get the plans and sections for these? Thier notoriously missing from every periodical, book or website about the expo! Please somebody give me a heads up! Thank you!
Niels Guldager on 17 Oct 2010 at 4:56 am #
I like that the transparency allow all EXPO visitors a glance at both the little mermaid and the bikes – so everybody will be able to say that they saw the Danish pavillon. With 1.000.000 EXPO visitors per day and 2 hour waiting in line for this and other pavillons this is another reflection of great design. Nicely done!