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the airport by MAD spans 2,267 hectares and features a 12,000-square-meter terminal under its feather-like roof.
the spiral structure is built from upcycled lantana camara, an invasive shrub introduced to india through colonial trade routes.
connections: +1000
designboom discusses this creative boom with stefano boeri, MVRDV's winy maas, christian kerez, beat huesler of oppenheim architecture, and the team at bofill taller de arquitectura.
the proposal draws from a historic english architectural feature composed of alternating curves.

architects kumiko inui, akihisa hirata and sou fujimoto image © designboom
installation view of the japan pavilion image © designboom
‘the angles of the layered roofs, caves and so on are rotated in relation to each other, lending a sense of multi-directionality to the space. as a result, the pillars emerge as individual elements in the internal space, creating a less rigid space.’ – akihisa hirata, may 24, 2012 image © designboom
‘responding to (kumiko) inui-san’s stance of starting with a peaked roof, we are layering roofs. it looks interesting with varioius nooks and crannies.’ – sou fujimoto, december 19, 2011 image © designboom
image © designboom
‘rather than proposing a house, I’m presenting a framework that changes and grows in accordance with people’s activities.’ – sou fujimoto, december 15, 2011 image © designboom
‘one of the first three models created. taking a hint from the pine tress washed away by the tsunami, I consider creating a structure out of felled trees. I envision differentiating the space using not designed elements but the very ‘noise’ inherent in nature.‘ – akihisa hirata, december 14, 2011 image © designboom
image © designboom
kumiko inui, akihisa hirata, japan pavilion commissioner toyo ito, sou fujimoto portrait © designboom