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LANDSCALE

São Miguel, Azores

“Landscale” was Mezzo Atelier’s answer to an invitation to create a piece for LAPA – Land Art Project Azores, at the Lakeshore of the Blue Lake of Sete Cidades.

This measurement instrument, a seven meter long graphical scale, invites people to quietly contemplate the monumental landscape around, while confronting their own scale with nature. The piece was realized with Cryptomeria Japonica wooden beams, a very soft japonese cedar, which was introduced in the past on the Azorean islands. There Cryptomeria found the perfect climate to grow and has been increasingly explored ever since. The black and white contrast, was given by the parcial carbonization of the beams after being assembled toguether. This process of burning the wood surface, called Shou Sugi Ban, was created in Japan for this same species in order to give it more resistance and to create a natural protection.

Read more about it on designboom



Project:
Landscale
Typology: Installation, Urban equipment
Client: LAPA Land Art Project Azores
Year: 2016
Location: S. Miguel island – Azores, Portugal
Production: Ventoencanado
Suppliers & Sponsors: Ponta Delgada Municipality, Sete Cidades Council and Central de Madeiras
Photos: Mezzo Atelier, Filipe Tavares
Video: Ventoencanado & Mezzo Atelier


 

 

LANDSCALE

São Miguel, Azores

“Landscale” was Mezzo Atelier’s answer to an invitation to create a piece for LAPA – Land Art Project Azores, at the Lakeshore of the Blue Lake of Sete Cidades.

This measurement instrument, a seven meter long graphical scale, invites people to quietly contemplate the monumental landscape around, while confronting their own scale with nature. The piece was realized with Cryptomeria Japonica wooden beams, a very soft japonese cedar, which was introduced in the past on the Azorean islands. There Cryptomeria found the perfect climate to grow and has been increasingly explored ever since. The black and white contrast, was given by the parcial carbonization of the beams after being assembled toguether. This process of burning the wood surface, called Shou Sugi Ban, was created in Japan for this same species in order to give it more resistance and to create a natural protection.

Read more about it on designboom



Project:
Landscale
Typology: Installation, Urban equipment
Client: LAPA Land Art Project Azores
Year: 2016
Location: S. Miguel island – Azores, Portugal
Production: Ventoencanado
Suppliers & Sponsors: Ponta Delgada Municipality, Sete Cidades Council and Central de Madeiras
Photos: Mezzo Atelier, Filipe Tavares
Video: Ventoencanado & Mezzo Atelier