Defying
expectations
SFER IK
Tulum, Mexico
SFER IK doesn’t look like
an ordinary exhibition
space—and that’s the point.
The Tulum location’s nestlike
structure was conceived as a
place where avant-garde artists
could gather and envision new
ways to create, inspired by
their unusual environs. Made
of locally sourced wood and
cement, the space’s ceilings
and walls are trimmed with
plants sprouting along circular
apertures to the world outside.
Its current exhibition includes
a diaphanous purple cloak
suspended from the ceiling—
an allusion, in part, to elevated
states of consciousness by artist
Bianca Bondi. Entry is free, so
long as visitors agree to walk the
floors barefoot. ÑWilder Davies
AUSTRALIA’S
ANCESTRAL HOME
ULURU–KATA TJUTA
NATIONAL PARK
Northern Territory, Australia
At the center of Uluru–
Kata Tjuta National Park
is the physical and cultural heart
of Australia, a red sandstone
monolith called Uluru (or
Ayers Rock, its colonial name)
that towers over the outback’s
desert plains. The park is a
UNESCO World Heritage Site and
sacred to the aboriginal Anangu,
who’ve inhabited the land for
tens of thousands of years.
Despite these protections,
the 1,142-ft.-tall rock has
been marred for decades by
poles and cables that allow
visitors to climb the site. That
changes in October, when the
government will officially close
Uluru to climbing, ensuring the
monument sustains no further
human damage.
—Hannah Lott-Schwartz
LIVING LIBRARY
VAC LIBRARY
Hanoi
Part library, part urban
farm, part playground, this
Farming Architects project in
Hanoi is geared toward teaching
kids about ecosystems and
agriculture. The VAC Library’s
climbable wooden structure
contains both a small collection
of books and a mini-ecosystem
comprising a garden, a fish
pond and a chicken coop—all
connected through aquaponics.
Waste from the koi pond is used
as fertilizer to help vegetables
grow, which cleanses the water
and returns it to the pond.
Chickens raised in cages within
the structure provide eggs and
waste that also help the plants
flourish. Visitors can lounge and
read the books stored in cubbies
beneath the library’s solar
panel-fitted roof, and children
are welcome to clamber up its
beams. —Mahita Gajanan