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Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion Beijing<a href="http://www.bjdw.org/en/" target="_blank">Beijing Design Week</a> is in full swing, and <a href="http://www.nikeflyknitcollective.com/" target="_blank">Nike’s Flyknit Collective</a> Beijing Feather Pavilion is a sustainable stand out from this year's show. Designer Arthur Huang of <a href="http://www.miniwiz.com/" target="_blank">Miniwiz</a> created the interactive <a href="http://inhabitat.com/david-ellis-transforms-piles-of-trash-into-moving-musical-sculptures/" target="_blank">kinetic installation</a>, which moves and morphs as visitors walk around and through it. Taut green cables create the webbed ceiling, which draws and contracts around a collection of <a href="http://www.ecouterre.com/nikes-virtually-seamless-flyknit-sneaker-is-part-shoe-part-sock/">Flyknit sneakers</a>, emulating the movements of the athletes that wear the line.1
Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion BeijingThe innovative Flyknit <a href="http://inhabitat.com/tag/eco-friendly-sneakers/" target="_blank">sneaker</a> put itself on the map by being the first continuous shoe without seams, as well as sustainable materials.2
Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion BeijingWith the shoe as inspiration, the <a href="http://inhabitat.com/fosterpartners-sand-dune-inspired-uae-pavilion/" target="_blank">pavilion</a> combines both the usage of sustainable materials and a seamlessness that is achieved with the endless grid of colored ropes that cascade from the center of the structure.3
Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion BeijingVisitors may play, bounce, or exercise on the structure, which creates different spatial movements with the cables that stretch in different angles up to the ceiling, almost glowing in rich hues of purple and green.4
Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion Beijing<a href="http://inhabitat.com/london-olympic-games-information-pavilion-concept-utilizes-recycled-materials/">The entire pavilion is made from recycled materials</a>, from cables to plastic walls. TPU POLLI- bricks make up the translucent base, which are made from compressed and recycled plastic.5
Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion BeijingThe circular bricks seem to glow with ambient light, which accentuate the green web of cables that create a halo above the Flyknit sneaker display.6
Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion BeijingHuang is no stranger to recycled materials. The Taipei based designer and his firm have been dedicated to sustainability from the get go, <a href="http://inhabitat.com/ecoark-pavilion-made-from-1-5-million-plastic-bottles/" target="_blank">famously designing the EcoArk</a>, a structure made from 1.5 million recycled PET plastic bottles.7
Arthur Huang Nike Pavilion BeijingVisitors may play, bounce, or exercise on the structure, which creates different spatial movements with the cables that stretch in different angles up to the ceiling, almost glowing in rich hues of purple and green.8








