recycled plastic bags and handmade paper form public art pavilion T10A in vietnam
Briefly

recycled plastic bags and handmade paper form public art pavilion T10A in vietnam
"ODDO architects shape the public art pavilion T10A in Hanoi, Vietnam using over 40,000 recycled plastic bags as well as handmade paper. Developed as a temporary exhibition space for Vietnamese architecture projects, the design team draws inspiration from Hanoi's craft heritage. The structure includes traditional handmade paper, known locally as Giấy Dó alongside the recycled plastic. Alongside the public art pavilions, there are paper domes within which visitors can explore the architectural drawings and information of the exhibitions from inside."
"The local community plays a central role in the ODDO architects' project because it is the volunteers who helped gather plastic waste and took part in the construction process, turning the public art pavilions in Hanoi, Vietnam, into a collective building effort. Visually, the pavilions stand out through three large wing-like roof sections, each representing different exhibition themes: residential architecture, interior design, and sustainability projects. The recycled plastic panels filter daylight, creating shifting patterns of colored light inside the pavilion,"
ODDO architects created the T10A public art pavilion in Hanoi using over 40,000 recycled plastic bags and traditional handmade Giấy Dó paper to form a temporary exhibition space. Paper domes house architectural drawings and information while a lightweight steel frame references common local construction methods. Local children decorated the domes with drawings of their imagined city, and volunteers collected plastic waste and helped build the structures, making the pavilion a community project. Three wing-like roof sections present residential, interior, and sustainability themes. The recycled panels filter daylight and glow when lit, and materials are intended for reuse after the exhibition.
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