
"Each year, Burning Man transforms Nevada's Black Rock Desert into a temporary city where large-scale installations define both the landscape and the collective experience. Serving as a platform for experimental design, the event brings together artists, architects, and interdisciplinary teams to create works that blur the boundaries between sculpture and architecture. These temporary structures often function as gathering spaces, landmarks, or immersive environments, embodying the festival's guiding principle of impermanence."
"Designed by Miguel Arraiz, the 2025 Burning Man Temple, titled Temple of the Deep, draws inspiration from the natural formations of the Black Rock Desert. The Temple combines organic, cave-like forms with a structured geometric framework influenced by Baroque architecture, guiding movement and perspective within the space. Its design, visually represented as a fractured black rock, symbolizes loss and recovery, embracing imperfections in a manner reminiscent of the Japanese art of kintsugi."
Burning Man transforms Nevada's Black Rock Desert into a temporary city where large-scale installations define landscape and collective experience. The event brings artists, architects, and interdisciplinary teams together to create works that blur sculpture and architecture. Temporary structures function as gathering spaces, landmarks, or immersive environments embodying impermanence. The 2025 edition introduced projects examining ecology, memory, and connectivity while addressing desert-building challenges. Installations ranged from intimate interactive pieces to monumental landmarks that encouraged reflection, participation, and community engagement before disappearing at the close of the event. Notable works included Temple of the Deep and The World Fair of Unity.
Read at ArchDaily
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