Alusta Pavilion

Research output: Artistic and non-textual formArchitectureArt in non-art workpeer-review

Abstract

Alusta pavilion, built on the courtyard of the Museum of Finnish Architecture and the Design museum, explores nature-culture relations and offers a place for encounters between humans and non-human animals in urban space. The pavilion functions as a platform for environmental discourse, both on the level of its form and materiality, and the different activities which take place there. It comprises a pollinator friendly meadow and structures made with clay in its different forms; unfired and fired brick and rammed earth. Alusta is realized by a multidisciplinary group lead by Suomi/Koivisto architects.

Alusta offers a space for thinking about our place as part of a more than human community. The pavilion takes its form through collaboration of plants, human visitors, natural processes and passage of time. The clay and wood structures offer habitats for people, plants and insects. Fungi take part in maintaining the natural cycles and offer shelter and nutrition to insects. In collaboration with ecologists from Helsinki University, the project explores increasing biodiversity in the urban environment and demonstrating the importance of soil and its microbes for the wellbeing of the ecosystem. Human visitor can participate in caring for the soil and plants and in building the pavilion. There will be clay workshops for families, architectural summer schools for youth and seminar programme on biodiversity and the built environment during summer 2022.

Alusta is part of architect Maiju Suomi’s practice-led doctoral research at Aalto University Department of Design. It also acts as a test laboratory for architect Elina Koivisto’s inquiry into natural materials in construction. The project is realized in collaboration with Raseko earth building school and students of design and architecture in Aalto University. The project is supported by Fiskars, Wienerberger Oy, Kekkilä Oy, Ilmarinen, Iki Carbon, Kääpä Biontech and Hyötykasviyhdistys. The project is funded by Kordelin foundation, The Arts Promotion Centre of Finland and Greta and William Lehtinen foundation. 
Original languageEnglish
Place of PublicationHelsinki
PublisherArkkitehtuurimuseo
Publication statusPublished - Jun 2022
MoE publication typeF3 Artistic part of a non-artistic publication

Field of art

  • Architecture
  • Design

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Alusta Pavilion'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this