More Than 200,000 Rivets Secure the Ultra-Thin Aluminum Facets of ‘The Orb’ by Marc Fornes — Colossal


From geometric, white panels riveted together into an undulating sphere, Marc Fornes / THEVERYMANY’s newest public installation invites visitors to immerse themselves in a luminous experience on Google’s Charleston East Campus in California.

Designed as a physical embodiment of innovation and creativity, “The Orb” invites us into a 10-meter-tall, 26-meter-wide labyrinthine form made of ultra-thin aluminum. “Edged yet edgeless, surfaces curve, branch, split, rejoin, and split again,” the studio (previously) says. “This extreme curvature—achieved through cutting-edge computational design—enables the surfaces to be entirely self-supporting despite being just three millimeters thick.”

a contemporary white architectural pavilion with undulating forms in the overall shape of a sphere

“The Orb” comprises 6,441 individual components connected with more than 217,000 rivets. During the day, a pattern of holes speckles sunlight across the pavilion and onto the ground. At night, the structure is illuminated, casting deep shadows that contrast the bright details.

Fornes’ mission, hybridizing elements of art and architecture, is to spark “the joy wandering, the joy of marveling.”

Find more on THEVERYMANY website.

people move around inside of a contemporary white architectural pavilion with undulating forms in the overall shape of a sphere
a detail of a contemporary white architectural pavilion with undulating forms in the overall shape of a sphere
a contemporary white architectural pavilion with undulating forms in the overall shape of a sphere, pictured illuminated at night
a detail of the interior of a contemporary white architectural pavilion with undulating forms in the overall shape of a sphere

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