1. ArchDaily
  2. SuperSpatial

SuperSpatial: The Latest Architecture and News

A Public Park in a Former Quarry in Australia and A Garden Bridge in China: 10 Unbuilt Public Spaces and Buildings Submitted to Archdaily

This week's curated selection of Best Unbuilt Architecture highlights public spaces and buildings submitted by the ArchDaily Community. From bridges to squares, from parks to markets and train stations, this article explores the various kinds of public infrastructure that support the urban fabric, showcasing distinct approaches worldwide.

Featuring a bridge that doubles as a garden in China, the redevelopment of public spaces to meet contemporary needs in Montenegro and the Czech Republic, or a pier park in New York, the round-up spans various scales, from single architectural objects to urban strategies, to masterplans. The following projects reveal the ideas that shape public spaces and amenities in different contexts, illustrating diverse approaches towards what constitutes the backbone of the urban fabric.

A Public Park in a Former Quarry in Australia and A Garden Bridge in China: 10 Unbuilt Public Spaces and Buildings Submitted to Archdaily - Image 1 of 4A Public Park in a Former Quarry in Australia and A Garden Bridge in China: 10 Unbuilt Public Spaces and Buildings Submitted to Archdaily - Image 2 of 4A Public Park in a Former Quarry in Australia and A Garden Bridge in China: 10 Unbuilt Public Spaces and Buildings Submitted to Archdaily - Image 3 of 4A Public Park in a Former Quarry in Australia and A Garden Bridge in China: 10 Unbuilt Public Spaces and Buildings Submitted to Archdaily - Image 4 of 4A Public Park in a Former Quarry in Australia and A Garden Bridge in China: 10 Unbuilt Public Spaces and Buildings Submitted to Archdaily - More Images+ 65

SuperSpatial Explores E-waste in Proposal for the Korean Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai

Multidisciplinary practice SuperSpatial was selected as one of the 6 finalists for the South Korean Pavilion at Expo 2020 in Dubai. Their design explores the future of e-waste through an architecture that re-uses thousands of obsolete computer parts as a construction material. Shaped like an amphitheater for temporary events, the project uses the Expo as an occasion to think about the global problem of e-waste by using a pavilion as a critical medium.

SuperSpatial Explores E-waste in Proposal for the Korean Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai - Image 1 of 4SuperSpatial Explores E-waste in Proposal for the Korean Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai - Image 2 of 4SuperSpatial Explores E-waste in Proposal for the Korean Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai - Image 3 of 4SuperSpatial Explores E-waste in Proposal for the Korean Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai - Image 4 of 4SuperSpatial Explores E-waste in Proposal for the Korean Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai - More Images+ 6