UK Pavilion wins 2010 RIBA Lubetkin Prize In  September 2007, Heatherwick Studio led the winning team in the competition to  design the UK Pavilion for the Shanghai 2010 Expo. The event is the largest Expo  ever with two hundred countries taking part and over 70 million visitors  expected. The theme of the Expo is “Better City, Better Life” and a key client  objective is for the UK Pavilion to be one of the five most popular attractions.  The studio’s design has three main aims: the first is to be a pavilion whose  architecture is a direct manifestation of the content it exhibits; the second is  to provide significant public open space in which visitors can relax; the third  is to find a simple idea that is strong enough to stand out amidst the busy-ness  of the hundreds of competing pavilions. These aims are captured in two  interlinked and experiential elements based around the subject of nature and  cities – the Seed Cathedral, and a multi-layered landscape treatment of the  6,000sqm site. The Seed Cathedral is a platform to show the work of the Royal  Botanical Gardens at Kew and their Millennium Seedbank. In the circulation zone  under the landscape that surrounds the Seed Cathedral a series of installations  explore in more detail the particularity of nature and UK cities. The Seed  Cathedral is a 20-metre high building, constructed from 60,000 transparent  7.5-metre long optical strands, each of which has embedded within its tip a  seed. The interior is silent and illuminated only by the daylight that has  filtered past each seed through each optical hair. The UK Pavilion has  consistently been ranked by visitors as one of the most popular pavilions with  50,000 people visiting each day.












 
