Expo 2020 Dubai pavilions are inspired by nature

    12 Oct 2021

    You’ll find gorgeous flora and fauna all over Expo 2020 Dubai, with lots of pavilions inspired by nature, The National News states.

    While mushrooms and edible herbs are being grown inside a vertical farm in Holland’s pavilion, Singapore’s is covered by more than 80,000 plants, including the country’s national flower, the pink Vanda Miss Joaquim.

    Malaysia’s pavilion is designed to feel like a rainforest, with sunken basement gardens and hundreds of lights representing the fireflies found in the country’s mangroves.

    A hanging garden of more than 10,000 plants covers Belgium’s pavilion, making it one of the most sustainable structures. The plants convert carbon dioxide into oxygen and help reduce the temperature inside the pavilion by 3-5ºC.

    New Zealand’s pavilion takes inspiration from the Whanganui River, which was legally recognised as a living entity in 2017. The facade of the 2,000-metre structure moves and replicates the sound of water travelling over rocks and through canyons.

    The canopy of Terra – The Sustainability Pavilion uses the sun’s rays to generate electricity during the day and collect water from the air at night. In total, the technology will help produce up to 22,000 litres of water a day and generate enough electricity to charge more than 900,000 mobile phones.

    Entering the Swedish pavilion feels like stepping into a forest, as you’re surrounded by tree trunks and a forest-like atmosphere. Using timber to build is more sustainable than concrete, and the exhibits inside the pavilion explore the need for construction to be more eco-friendly.

    The facade of Morocco’s pavilion, meanwhile, is made out of rammed earth, surrounding a central courtyard filled with greenery.

    Five of the greenest pavilions at Expo 2020 Dubai

    The world fair’s sustainability theme has inspired the designers of many pavilions currently being built, according to The National News.

    Orchids from Singapore and date palms from the desert are among the foliage that will display exotic flowers named after famous people.

    In the vast Expo 2020 Dubai site, its skyline dominated by towering glass and steel structures, lies a message of sustainability.

    When organisers were planning Terra – the Sustainability Pavilion, the brief was to build a large structure, open to the public, that generated its own electricity and cooling in the middle of the desert.

    The result is a sustainable building that will become a science centre after Expo 2020 ends.

    As scores of pavilions in Dubai South take shape before the event opens in October, the theme of sustainability has been carried through to many of the country’s structures.

    Let’s take a look at five of the greenest pavilions visitors will see.

    Singapore

    Visitors to the Singapore pavilion will walk into a garden at the lower level that features a pond filled with plants.

    Singapore’s pavilion will be one of the greenest at Dubai Expo 2020.

    Featuring hanging gardens, exotic flowers and lush rainforest plants, its energy use will be net zero.

    The building’s roof will be covered in 500 solar panels, which will meet its energy demands.

    There will be no air conditioning, with plants and dry mist fans used instead to keep the pavilion cool.

    A pond filled with plants will suck pollutants from the air, while solar power will be used to desalinate groundwater for irrigation and to create mist.

    Even the food waste will be turned into a clean odourless wastewater that can be recycled.

    Trees planted along the border are designed to cut off direct sunlight and offer protection from desert winds, while sun pipes will capture light from the roof and funnel it to more shaded spots.

    Malaysia

    The wooden poles of the Malaysia Pavilion will be lit up at night to represent fireflies in mangrove trees.

    Malaysia’s pavilion will offset emissions produced in construction and operations, helping to make it carbon neutral.

    Constructed mainly using meranti wood, from a tree native to south-east Asia, the building will showcase the country’s sustainable forestry policies.

    A rainforest canopy, featuring trees, flora, fauna and a meandering river, will be the exhibit’s centrepiece.

    Its sunken basement gardens and “floating” exhibition halls suspended on timber stilts and steel beams will tell the story of the urgent need to protect ancient trees.

    About 40 solar panels on the roof of Malaysia’s pavilion will meet 10 per cent of the building’s energy requirements, while recycled water will be used to cool it.

    Belgium

    The Belgium Expo 2020 pavilion will have a hanging garden.

    Belgium’s pavilion is a zero-waste building featuring various environmentally friendly design features.

    A hanging garden with 10,000 plants will convert carbon dioxide into oxygen, storing 35 tonnes of carbon dioxide over the course of the six-month event.

    The plants will also help reduce the temperature by 3-5º C.

    The building, which will feature a giant “green” arch made from natural materials, will maximise the use of water, daylight and renewable energy.

    Netherlands

    The Netherlands’ pavilion will harvest water, energy and food in a cone-shaped vertical farm.

    The power of nature will be showcased at the dazzling Dutch pavilion, which will house a vertical farm.

    A giant cone blanketed with edible plants, cress and mushrooms will feature a solar-powered rain shower that captures moisture from the air.

    The water in the “rainmaker” will be cooled with solar energy, to feed the plants and help cool the pavilion.

    It will harvest hundreds of litres of water daily, which will be used to irrigate the plants.

    The lounge’s floor and wall panels will be made by mycelium, a biodegradable fungi-based substance, to show how mushrooms can be used as a building material.

    Spain

    The 14 cones at Spain’s Expo 2020 Pavilion will function as natural cooling towers.

    Spain’s eco-friendly pavilion is designed to showcase the country’s approach to sustainability.

    There will be no air conditioning inside the building.

    Instead, its 14 cones function as natural cooling towers, lowering the temperature inside by expelling hot air.

    The pavilion will also feature a “forest of the future”, an artificial ecosystem built from organic and recycled materials designed to showcase other sustainable solutions.

    It includes a feature that will react to the movement of visitors and adjust its color after assessing visitors’ energy consumption habits.

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