ICEWALL / Yushiro Okamoto

Photographs courtesy of Yushiro Okamoto

As a part of MIT’s 150th anniversary celebration, a student competition was held for a installation to become part of the festivities. Yushiro Okamoto‘s winning proposal, ICEWALL, has recently been completed and has been submitted to share with us here at ArchDaily. Follow after the break to browse through a large collection of photographs of the project.

MIT150 celebrates past innovation and achievement, while acting as a catalyst for the next generation. In this spirit, IceWall plants a new future, even as its own seemingly fades away during the Festival of Art, Science and Technology.

Photographs courtesy of Yushiro Okamoto

The installation consists of blocks of ice stacked on each other, creating one continuous surface facing the Charles River. Each block will have flower seeds frozen inside, visible during the Festival. The wall will be lit at night, creating a new face for MIT from across the river in Boston. As FAST concludes and Icewall melts away, the seeds are left behind in the ground. As the seeds germinate and bloom, the installation will continue to celebrate the sesquicentennial in the spring.

Photographs courtesy of Yushiro Okamoto

Photographs courtesy of Yushiro Okamoto
Photographs courtesy of Yushiro Okamoto
Photographs courtesy of Yushiro Okamoto

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Cite: Hank Jarz. "ICEWALL / Yushiro Okamoto" 10 Mar 2011. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/118504/icewall-yushiro-okamoto> ISSN 0719-8884

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