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I Created A Secret Forest In The Very Heart Of London
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I Created A Secret Forest In The Very Heart Of London

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A highlight art installation of the London Festival of Architecture 2018 called The Building Site brings a section of secluded Lithuanian forest in front of St Paul’s Cathedral. I’m a landscape architect and an artist, Sigita Simona Paplauskaite, and I’ve designed an immersive environment that seeks to question the rapid urban development and its impact on the human relationship with the Mother Nature.

Open during London Festival of Architecture, The Building Site addressed the growing concern around the changing ownership of public spaces and city gardens in London and invited its visitors to reflect on the consequences of urbanization on local communities and natural ecosystems. The installation occupied a significant surface of public space, creating an alternative construction site – a signature mark for London in transition. Utilizing the aesthetic of a temporary hoarding from the outside, the pavilion offers a beautiful forest-like experience from within.

The Building Site was inspired by a poetic narrative of Lithuanian writer, poet and philologist Vincas Kreve-Mickevicius’s novel ‘Herdsman and the Linden Tree.’ The fictional novel describes the parallel lives of the oldest man and oldest forest tree in the village, exposing a human connection to nature and mapping how this relationship changed over time. Reflecting on the highly engineered environments of both humanity and beautiful nature, The Building Site seeks to represent the confrontation between the life of man and the living world in an age of rapid external pressures.

Over the course of the whole month of June, The Building Site hosted poetry readings, concerts, performances, video screenings, and debates every weekend. During these events, the visitors had a chance to explore the diversity of uniquely artful interpretations of the human relationship with nature.

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More info: sigitasimona.com

This installation was one of the highlight and core London Festival of Architecture events, responding to the subject of ‘Identity’

It brings a section of secluded Lithuanian forest in front of St Paul’s Cathedral

During the build up works, it was not known to be an art piece, whereas later it opened its door to public and was nourished by rich cultural event programme

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The Building Site aimed to question the changing ownership of public-private land in London

It attracted over 17,000 active visitors during the month of June

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The urban installation recreated a section of a forest reminding of growing ecological concerns in urban planning strategies

It occupied a significant surface of public space, creating an alternative construction site – a signature mark for London in transition

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Reflective on the inside, it not only increased the interior volume, but as well gently reminded of its context – one of the most active and polluted streets in London

Utilising the aesthetic of a temporary hoarding from the outside, the pavilion offers an unexpected forest-like experience from within

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Mesmerizing by its visual impact, the space accumulated woodland planting colours and scents

Tourists, locals and professionals – everyone was up for a debate about the ongoing urban planning processes and their consequences

The Building Site seeks to represent the confrontation between the life of man and the living world in an age of rapid external pressures

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The composer Ruta Vitkauskaite offered a unique vocal and instrumental experience meanwhile sharing wi-fi headphones with those who could not fit inside the installation

Open daily, the Building Site welcomed visitors throughout all the month

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Here’s where you can find it in London

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Sigita Simona Paplauskaite

Sigita Simona Paplauskaite

Author, Community member

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a landscape architect & an artist. based in Brussels - London - Vilnius

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Sigita Simona Paplauskaite

Sigita Simona Paplauskaite

Author, Community member

a landscape architect & an artist. based in Brussels - London - Vilnius

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Night Owl
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6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Love it. I have a feeling that humanity often views itself as something isolated from nature (as something better, smarter etc. and isolating itself with its towns) and doesn't realize we're part of the nature and need it to live but that the Earth and many of its species can easily continue to live without us.

Night Owl
Community Member
6 years ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Love it. I have a feeling that humanity often views itself as something isolated from nature (as something better, smarter etc. and isolating itself with its towns) and doesn't realize we're part of the nature and need it to live but that the Earth and many of its species can easily continue to live without us.

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