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abstract
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WEAVE

Combining the immediate landscape and tectonic form in one unfolding strategy, in true elevation the Weave looks like a conventional bridge. It is anything but. Built as a landscape strategy for the University of Pennsylvania in 2007, traces of the bridge begin at a sports field furthest from the railway and wind their way, gaining force as they approach the train tracks. The trace begins to rise off the ground in a slow ascent, turning into tectonic threads and then, in a burst of energy, spins across the railway in a close spiralling form. Woven into those lines are routes for pedestrians and landscape. The Weave, like DNA, spins several sequences and multiple narratives.

Location:
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, USA
Collaborators:
Arup AGU
Completion:
2007
Built Area:
42 m in length
Program:
Pedestrian Bridge
Budget:
$2 Million USD
Client:
University of Pennsylvania

abstract