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Designed by the Czech architecture studio Formosa AA, the two-storey pavilion is shaded by 12-metre-tall capillaries carrying specially treated water. Image Credit: Supplied

Dubai: Water scarcity has inspired cutting-edge innovations across the world with Czech Republic joining the list of countries scouring for a viable solution. At Expo 2020 Dubai, the Central European nation offers a practical method to transform hot, arid land into fertile soil through a canopy of intertwined pipes.

Designed by the Czech architecture studio Formosa AA, the two-storey building is shaded by 12-metre-tall steel capillaries that are in line with the theme of Sustainability, the district out of which the pavilion is based.

Further driving home the concept is the surrounding pavilion garden irrigated through the pipes carrying specially treated water.

Enriching the desert soil

Nicknamed ‘spaghetti monster’, the overhead cluster of pipes will be part of an active exhibition presenting the Czech-invented Solar Air Water Earth Resource (S.A.W.E.R) system.

This two-part solar-powered technology extracts water from the desert air, developed by the University Centre of Energy Efficient Buildings and the Faculty of Mechanical Engineering of the Czech Technical University, and treats it with subsurface cultures to cultivate arid soil, the technology for which was developed by the Botanical Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic.

“The pavilion itself won’t only be an exhibition space, but will itself become a distinctive exhibit,” says the Czech Pavilion’s Commissioner General Jiri Frantisek Potuznik. “The impressive twelve-metre structure growing around the building is exceptional both from an architectural and constructional standpoint – nobody has ever built such a large self-supporting structure from steel.”

The pavilion itself won’t only be an exhibition space, but will itself become a distinctive exhibit. The impressive twelve-metre structure growing around the building is exceptional both from an architectural and constructional standpoint – nobody has ever built such a large self-supporting structure from steel.

- Jiri Frantisek Potuznik, Commissioner General of Czech Republic Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai

The heart of the pavilion

Visitors will experience the autonomous S.A.W.E.R system in person from the moment they arrive at the pavilion, following its pipes to the interior where it leads to ‘The Heart of the Pavilion’ – the first exhibition.

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The external organic pipes lead to the heart of the pavilion, where a fountain filled with crystal clear water will welcome guests. Image Credit: Supplied

The heart is a spring filled with crystal clear water from the pipes and will be situated in the entrance hall of the first floor. Across from the fountain, visitors can learn more about the S.A.W.E.R system and its inner workings through animations on a panel.

Hand-blown glass monument

Towards east of the hall, visitors will find an art installation made of steel fibre and glass designed by Maxim Velcovsky, the art director of the Czech-based glassmaking company, LASVIT.

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Designer Maxim Velcovsky's permanent art installation at the pavilion is a composition of steel, glass and dynamic lighting. Image Credit: Supplied

Lighting and glass structures made by LASVIT are a ubiquitous sight in Dubai, where the manufacturer has undertaken major projects at the Dubai Opera, the Dubai Metro, the Dubai Design District and several hotels.

Velcovsky’s Dubai Expo installation is composed of 300 golden lianas that carry small glass drops pulsating light.

Rotating exhibits

The second floor will be dedicated to a 200-square-metre permanent exhibition titled 'The Country for the Future' and the remaining 100-square-metre space is slotted to temporary exhibitions subject to rotation every two weeks.

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Temporary exhibits will deck the second floor of the pavilion, each thematic exposition lasting for 14 days for the six months of Expo. Image Credit: Supplied

Categorised under the thematic topics of water, design, technology and universities, the exhibits will champion the innovations of Czech companies.

At the ‘NANOWORLD’ exhibit, for instance, visitors will get to see fibres that are a thousand times thinner than the width of a human hair, highlighting Czech nanotechnologies.

- The writer is an intern with Gulf News.