West Entrance, Triulza Side

The guide to Expo 2015 for design lovers. The Triulza Entrance is the other large access point to our temporary city. Those who come by train arrive here as well as those who come by Metro and miss the Fiorenza entrance. In front of you dozens and dozens of turnstiles, endless queues (if there were no queues, it would mean that the event was a flop, and so, long live the queues!). This is the entrance where you'll find the twenty-two giant statues by Dante Ferretti, [“The Guardians of Food”](http://www.expo2015.org/en/news/president-sergio-mattarella-inaugurates-the-works-of-dante-ferretti-at-expo-milano-2015), so appreciated by the huge population of Instagram. But before entering, we have a couple of places to stop off at... All the photos are by Beatrice Bianchetti and Anna Chiara Maggiolini.

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A Physical Network You Can Walk On

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In general, whenever architecture is chosen to directly express concepts and metaphors, the results are never that great. Fortunately, every law has its exceptions. Given the concept: “We live in a world where we're all interconnected. Regardless of census and social class, whatever a single person does, everyone feels the consequences”, the great net of the Brazil Pavilion is spot-on. In the Instagram era, this is the pavilion that wins hands down. With the simplest of experiential designs that brings so many things to mind. A demonstration that the binary dichotomy contents / entertainment (at least at Expo 2015) has no right to citizenship. A "Bravo!" to the designers of Studio Arthur Casas and Atelier Marko Brajovic. Really well done!

A Physical Network You Can Walk On
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A Physical Network You Can Walk On
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A Physical Network You Can Walk On
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Khalifa Al Khalifa

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