Paul Cocksedge designs 33-metre-long garden canopy that mimics the path of the sun
London designer Paul Cocksedge has unveiled plans to build a structure in one of the world's largest botanic gardens in Oman, which is based on the sun's path across the sky.
Cocksedge is working with engineering firm Arup to create the 33-metre-long sculptural steel canopy.
It will offer shade to visitors to the soon-to-open Oman Botanic Garden, a 420-hectare garden that is set to become the largest of its kind in the Arabian Peninsula.
The asymmetric structure will take a distorted figure-of-eight shape designed to precisely mimic the sun's changing position in the sky over the course of a year. This form was created using planetary data, collected from the garden.
"It made sense to use the sun, and our perception of its 'movements' as the basis for our design. Once we started to study the lines of the earth's rotation around the sun, and explore the science of the planets, we were hooked. There's so much data, and so many shapes and lines that we could never have imagined ourselves,"Â explained Cocksedge. "We based the shade on the sun's shifting position in the sky, which we plotted using an analemma ? a diagram that shows the sun as if photographed from the garden at the same time every day for a year," he continued. "Every analemma is unique to its location, meaning the canopy's form is specific to its surroundings."
Cocksedge is an industrial designer but has worked on several large-scale projects, including a staircase that incorpor...
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