Evoluon
The building is unique due to its very futuristic design, resembling a landed flying saucer. It was designed by architects Leo de Bever and Louis Christiaan Kalff, while the exhibition it housed was conceived by James Gardner. De Bever and Kalff only got two demands for the design of the building, it had to be "spectacular" and it had to be possible to hold exhibitions in the building.
Its concrete dome is 77 metres (253 ft) in diameter and is held in place by 169 kilometres (105 mi) of reinforcing steel bars.
In the 1960s and 1970s the Evoluon attracted large numbers of visitors due to its innovative interactive exhibitions. When competing science museums opened in other cities, the number of visitors declined and the original museum closed down in 1989. The building was converted into a conference centre which opened in 1998.
In the UK the Evoluon is chiefly remembered from Bert Haanstra's wordless short film entitled simply Evoluon, commissioned by Philips to publicise the museum, and shown as a trade test colour film on BBC television from 1968 to 1972.
In October 2013 the Evoluon was used to stage four 3D-concerts by the German electronic band Kraftwerk, each before an audience of 1,200 spectators. Key band member Ralf Hütter handpicked the venue for its retro-futuristic look. Bespoke 3D-visuals of the saucer section of the building descending from space were used in the live rendition of their track Spacelab.
On September 24, 2022, the Evoluon reopened to the public with the RetroFuture exhibition.
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View from the north
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Aerial view in 2009
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Night view in 1991
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Entrance lobby
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Interior in 1968
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Interior in 2016
See also
References
- ^ "Architect Evoluon Leo de Bever overleden" (in Dutch). Nederlandse Omroep Stichting. 17 August 2015. Retrieved 23 August 2015.
- ^ "Kraftwerk - Spacelab (Live @ Evoluon 18-10-2013) - YouTube". YouTube.
- ^ "RetroFuture – Technology is Our Next Nature".
External links
Media related to Evoluon at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
- Extensive site about the history of the Evoluon
- Philips Technical Review 1970 5/6 -- article on The Evoluon at page 186