ReviveR
Hosted in the transformed Shenzhen Women & Children's Centre, ReviveR offers an exploration of various narratives surrounding the building that hosts it, from the importance of playful, social, fun environments for people of all ages to the need to reuse outdated buildings and materials to reduce carbon emissions, following the principles of circularity. Designed to be enjoyable and educational for adults and children alike, the exhibition is on display in the building’s 5th-floor auditorium from December 6th, 2023 until February 28th, 2024.
- Location
- China Mainland
- City
- Shenzhen
- Year
- 2023
- Surface
- 400 m²
- Client
- Shenzhen Children & Women Building Operation and Management Co., Ltd.
- Status
- Realised
- Programmes
- Exhibition
- Themes
- Sustainability , Transformations
ReviveR positions its host building, the Shenzhen Women & Children’s Centre, as a kind of manifesto, asking “what would our cities look like if we pursued similarly playful, social, and sustainable transformations of all existing buildings?” The exhibition examines 27 key MVRDV designs through three lenses: projects that transform existing buildings; projects that exemplify MVRDV’s bold and playful style; and projects in the Southeast Asia region. At the centre of the space are seven “core projects” that are representative of all three categories simultaneously, including the Shenzhen Women & Children’s Centre itself.
The exhibition design similarly takes its cues from the Shenzhen Women & Children’s Centre. The most immediately noticeable example of this is in its colours, which replicate the yellow, green, orange, and pink of the building’s façade. On a deeper level, circularity – both figurative and literal – is a recurring theme. The curves and circles that characterise the building’s floorplans re-emerge in the layout of the exhibition, turning the three project categories into a Venn diagram with the core projects at the centre. Most of the materials used in the exhibition’s construction are locally sourced and reusable, with the exhibits mounted on bamboo structures, for example.
In the circular economy, every end is also a beginning; this is metaphorically reflected in the fact the exhibition can be experienced equally well in two directions – a tactic partly devised as a response to the auditorium space that hosts the exhibition, with entrances on both sides of the room. The exhibition’s palindromic name and the curatorial statement, which can be read with its paragraphs reversed, also reflect this “circular” characteristic.
The exhibition design takes a number of steps to ensure that even the youngest visitors to the Shenzhen Women & Children’s Centre can enjoy themselves. Alongside the exhibited projects are two worktables for children to practice the tools of the architect. On one, children will be invited to draw their city of the future, with the resulting drawings exhibited on the adjacent wall. On the other table, building blocks will allow the children to test their modelling skills and collectively build their city of the future. Animal tracks are used to guide children around the exhibition, with the bio-regions that the animals are endemic to referencing the locations of the projects; the exhibition brochure offers a guide to which animal makes which tracks alongside colouring games, and instructions to turn the brochure into an origami fan (download and print it yourself here!) Finally, while exhibitions are typically designed around visitors with an “eye-level” at around 1.7 metres high, ReviveR is designed with a second eye-level of around 1 metre, more suitable to children, in mind.
“It is poetic, in a sense, that we are able to put on this exhibition not only for designers, not even just for adults, but also for the children that visit this building”, says MVRDV founding partner Jacob van Rijs. “The projects that we present in ReviveR aim to ensure a better future for the world, and imagine what that future could look like. One day, the children that visit here will be the custodians of that future. They will, I hope, push the ideas we have started to explore to levels that we can’t even imagine today. If we play even the smallest role in inspiring them, we have succeeded.”
Gallery
Credits
- Architect
- Founding partner in charge
- Partner
- Strategy & Development
- Partners