Architecture

Dome of broken umbrellas takes to New York river

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Harvest Dome 2.0 (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
The dome is built from 450 discarded and broken umbrellas support by a floating ring made from 128 2-liter drinks bottles (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
The project is a sequel to the first Harvest Dome, and like it was built for Inwood Hill Park. The first dome came to an inauspicious end in 2011 (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
Harvest Dome 2.0 floats on the waters near Spuyten Duyvil Creek at the north tip of Manhattan till the end of August (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
The dome is built from 450 discarded and broken umbrellas support by a floating ring made from 128 2-liter drinks bottles (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
The project is a sequel to the first Harvest Dome, and like it was built for Inwood Hill Park. The first dome came to an inauspicious end in 2011 (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
Harvest Dome 2.0 (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
Harvest Dome 2.0 floats on the waters near Spuyten Duyvil Creek at the north tip of Manhattan till the end of August (Photo: Andreas Symietz)
The dome is built from 450 discarded and broken umbrellas support by a floating ring made from 128 2-liter drinks bottles (Photo: SLO Architecture)
The dome is built from 450 discarded and broken umbrellas support by a floating ring made from 128 2-liter drinks bottles (Photo: SLO Architecture)
Harvest Dome 2.0 takes to the water (Photo: SLO Architecture)
These geese don't seem to mind (Photo: SLO Architecture)
View gallery - 11 images

Take a pleasure cruise up the Harlem River this month and you surely won't miss the 24-ft (7.3-m) diameter Harvest Dome 2.0 which floats on the waters near Spuyten Duyvil Creek at the north tip of Manhattan, New York. Built to draw eyes to the city's watercourses, the dome is built from 450 discarded and broken umbrellas support by a floating ring made from 128 2-liter drinks bottles.

The project is a sequel to the first Harvest Dome, and like it was built for Inwood Hill Park. The first dome came to an inauspicious end in 2011 when, en route to its final location, the pontoon of canoes transporting the dome shipwrecked and drifted to Rikers Island where, co-creator Amanda Schachter of SLO Architecture tells Gizmag, it was destroyed by prison officers.

Perhaps it was the opportunity to make amends that drew a team of architecture grads and locals to volunteer to build the thing. Schacter and her husband and partner, Alexander Levi, turned to Kickstarter to fund version 2, seeking US$7,500 – modest, by Kickstarter standards. The campaign included offers to sell parts of the original dome (complete with a certificate of authenticity that the piece had been "in custody" on Rikers) to the high bidders.

"The piece celebrates the particular tides at the Northern tip of Manhattan, at Spuyten Duyvil, home to one of the last remaining saltmarshes on the island," Schachter says. "The Dome alternates between sitting on the mudflat at low tide to floating in the water during high tide."

High or low tide, the dome will be on the river throughout August.

Sources: SLO Architecture, SLO Blog, via Fast Company

View gallery - 11 images
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3 comments
The Skud
Neat! Useless, but neat! However, recently seen (my memory of exactly where escapes me, but I think it was on a site called "Craziest Gadgets") there is a similar dome, constructed from umbrellas 'zipped' together, making a small living space in a park. Either way, a good use for usually discarded junk.
Gregg Eshelman
$7,500 to build an art project from free trash?
the.other.will
Brilliant! Still beautiful while static. Hope they make a similar one for permanent display somewhere. It doesn't look like it will survive too many storms.