"The New Zealand Pavilion project presented us with an invaluable opportunity to further develop our specialist project management skills, and to work with different cultures and markets. Its ultimate success will be testament to the collaborative nature inherent in the project from the very start."
With its proven international track record and an established local presence, Beca Carter Hollings & Ferner Limited (Beca) was an obvious partner choice of the New Zealand Pavilion at Shanghai World Expo 2010.
"Beca provided multidisciplinary engineering services, and ESD advice to the project," says Andrew Jackson, technical director building services.
"With the pavilion only operational for six months, the design of the structure needed to take into consideration its eventual deconstruction," says Rob Jury, technical director structural engineering. "The pavilion design, along with its construction, was required to conform to the dictates of the specific code established by the Local Design Institute, which covered the temporary utilisation of the buildings."
"Low-impact, cost-effective ESD features were also implemented to improve the quality of the building environment, reduce operating costs and promote New Zealand's sustainable image," says Jackson.
In all, Beca provided expertise in structural, electrical and mechanical engineering, fire and civil engineering, plumbing and drainage and sustainability services.
"Having a knowledge of local procedures and an international skill set meant Beca was able to work closely with everyone involved to ensure a best-practice outcome for the project," says Jackson.
Creating a visually arresting building is only half the story of the New Zealand Pavilion at Shanghai World Expo 2010. Once inside, visitors will be taken on a journey through a day-in-the-life of a Kiwi family. Making sure that journey is a cross-cultural success is Story Inc, the firm behind the renowned Lord of the Rings international touring exhibition.
"The visitor experience focuses on the constant presence of nature in New Zealand's urban life and the benefits it brings," says Dean Cato, director of Story Inc.
Starting with the plaza the physical manifestation of Rangi and Papa of the Maori creation myth visitors are welcomed by Chinese-speaking New Zealanders and kapa haka performers. Interactive pou, or totem poles, allow visitors to learn more about New Zealand before entering the pavilion. A 1.8-tonne greenstone boulder is the symbolic heart of the pavilion, which visitors can touch before passing through a waharoa depicting the Maori god Tane.
"After passing through the welcoming arms of Tane, visitors take a chronological journey from dawn to dusk that traverses the seasons and the New Zealand landscape," says Cato. "Set out over five stations, the story is punctuated by a series of four-sided screen towers, each depicting a different sequence, to provide each visitor with an individual look into New Zealand culture."