Dubai has been chosen as the site of the 2020 World
Expo, themed “Connecting Minds, Creating the Future”, will become the first
Middle Eastern city to host the event in its 150-year history.
HOK led the design
team that developed the master plan for the Expo, which is expected to draw
more than 25 million visitors from October 2020 through April 2021. The plan
looks to the future while paying homage to Emirati culture and heritage.
The 1,082-acre
(438-hectare) Expo site is on the southwestern edge of Dubai
in Jebel Ali, near Dubai’s
new Al Maktoum International Airport and Jebel Ali Port. HOK’s design features
three separate pavilions symbolizing opportunity, sustainability and mobility,
with “innovation pods” and “best practice areas” in each thematic zone.
These three zones
emanate from a central plaza named the Al Wasl, a historical name for Dubai meaning “the
connection.” Inspired by the layout of a traditional Arabic “souk,” or
marketplace, the design places larger pavilions to the perimeter while
clustering smaller exhibit spaces toward the center of the site. This creates a
smooth pedestrian flow while encouraging interaction among visitors.
The team planned the
Expo site and infrastructure to create a new sustainable benchmark for events
in the Middle East. An iconic photovoltaic
fabric structure covers the main walkways, acting as a solar-powered sun shade
and combining with photovoltaic panels on building facades to capture enough
sunlight to generate at least half of the Expo’s energy requirements onsite.
At night, the fabric
will be transformed into an illuminated display of lights and digital
projections. Smaller connective streets will be shaded through the use of
pavilions and strategic landscaping. The alternative transportation plan
includes a gondola that links each of the thematic zones and the main entrance
while creating an additional viewing experience for visitors.
After the close of
the Expo in 2021, three main pavilions – the Welcome Pavilion, the Innovation
Pavilion and the UAE Pavilion – will be combined and transformed into the
Museum of the Future. HOK teamed with Populous, which provided venue planning
and participant design guidelines, and Arup, which provided infrastructure and
transportation services, on the master plan.







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