One of the challenges of using
standardized geometry is how to create a variety of forms. Dutch
designer Marijke de Goey shows what can be achieved in her radical
design for a small pedestrian bridge over two artificial lakes
at the Alan Gibbs Trust Park in Auckland, New Zealand. De Goey
originally learnt how to make sculptural objects through her training
as a jewellery designer. Her work includes the bridal tiara for
the recent royal wedding of Dutch crown prince Alexander to Maxima
Zorreguieta. Made of white gold and diamonds, the tiara is shaped
like two bridges to fit across the bride's forehead.
For the New Zealand project, the miniature is
powerfully transformed into the monumental. Using 22 welded tubular
steel cubes each measuring 3 x 3 x 3m to support an aluminium
walkway, de Goey elaborates on the basic concept of linked cuboid
forms. The walkway winds in a decidedly perilous fashion between
the cubic steel skeleton, which makes the simple matter of traversing
the bridge an adventure not for the fainthearted. Completing the
slightly surreal tableau, the water of the lake has been coloured
an intense blue using environmentally friendly pigment.
Engineered by Peter Boardman, the structure
weighs 11 tons and was transported to site in two prefabricated
sections by a Russian helicopter. (Due to adverse weather conditions
the pilot was forced to land in a private field, much to the surprise
of a local farmer and his cows, who proceeded to lick the structure,
showing a surprising measure of bovine aesthetic appreciation)
|