For
our final Arch 199 project, we designed the city of Octavia, a
fictional place imagined by Italo Calvino in his text Invisible
Cities. This
city is described as “the spider-web city” and is held up solely
by ropes and chains between two mountains. All buildings hang below
the support system. Those who live in Octavia cannot be certain of
their fate from day to day because, as Calvino points out, “they
know the net will only last so long” (Calvino, 75). We took these
ideas and transformed the fictional place into a real structure with
a twist: the whole thing was made out of candy.
Using
Lifesavers, Twizzlers, Fruit Roll-Ups, Starburst, Gummy Bears, dental
floss, Hershey’s Kisses, and some rope, we created Octavia on a
scale that spanned the size of a room. Below our city, marshmallow
clouds rested upon a bedsheet that represented the void into which
the city would inevitably fall. There were three main support ropes,
with floss, Twizzlers, and Fruit Roll-Ups creating the rest of the
spider web. Everything else hung from these supports, with nothing
rising up.
Our
construction of our masterpiece was most definitely on the fly, but
it turned out much better than we initially thought. Our original
idea was to have a dozen or so skewers with a pineapple on each side
with some fruit on the skewers and some rock candy hanging as well;
we were quickly told that this was too small scale and we had to
shoot for the stars! When we finally secured our exhibition locale,
the famous “Eagle’s Nest” room in Temple Hoyne Buell Hall, we
really took a big step forward. We constructed the city in phases and
different waves of volunteers. The structure went up Sunday, the
houses and city elements early Monday, the clouds below on Monday
night, and the great finishing touches before the unveiling on
Tuesday.
THANKS!
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