Saudi Pavilion at Osaka Expo wins New York Architectural Design Awards

Saudi Arabia’s pavilion has already attracted over half a million visitors since its launch on April 13. (AFP)
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Updated 27 May 2025
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Saudi Pavilion at Osaka Expo wins New York Architectural Design Awards

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Pavilion at Expo 2025 Osaka-Kansai was awarded the Gold Prize in the Cultural Architecture in the Interactive and Experiential Spaces category by the New York Architectural Design Awards.

The prize recognizes the pavilion’s design and architecture, which offers visitors an immersive experience and insight into Saudi Arabia’s heritage.

According to the Saudi Press Agency (SPA), the pavilion was spearheaded by the Saudi Architecture and Design Commission and was led by CEO Dr. Sumayah Al-Solaiman and Project Manager Fatima Al-Doukhi. It was also designed by the renowned global firm Foster + Partners.

The design highlights the cultural similarities between the kingdom and Japan, while focusing on sustainability, employing passive cooling strategies enhanced by the strategic placement of structural blocks to facilitate wind movement.

The pavilion features low-carbon materials, energy-efficient lighting and solar energy technologies, SPA reported. It also features Braille signage and pathways for visitors with disabilities, making the building accessible and inclusive.

Saudi Arabia’s pavilion has already attracted over half a million visitors since its launch on April 13.

It has also hosted over 175 events, including cultural performances, business events, media and over 400 VIP delegations.


American-French filmmaker Roman Hill discusses his installation ‘Inflow:Outflow’ 

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American-French filmmaker Roman Hill discusses his installation ‘Inflow:Outflow’ 

RIYADH: For filmmaker and artist Roman Hill, Noor Riyadh — the festival of light art which took place this year from Nov. 20 to Dec. 6 under the theme “In the Blink of an Eye” — is “a rare opportunity to create truly monumental, immersive work.”  

Hill’s “Inflow:Outflow” consisted of two 15x7-meter projections in Riyadh’s STC metro station. He described it in a statement to Arab News as “a visual poem” that “celebrates universal movement.” 

“At every moment, everything — from the cells in our bodies to the microorganisms around us, and all the way up to the stars and galaxies — is engaged in a continuous dance of creation and destruction,” Hill elaborated. 

His installation, according to the Noor Riyadh website, “translates microscopic realities into monumental projections. Illumination magnifies chemical reactions filmed through polarized light, expanding them to an architectural scale. Color and textures cascade like slow galaxies, enveloping surfaces in living pigment. 

“By revealing the sublime within the small, the work bridges science and mysticism,” it continues. “Hill’s imagery, neither abstract nor representational, invites contemplation of unseen beauty.” 

The theme of this year’s festival “resonates” with his work, Hill said, “because it reminds us that, in a single instant, we are both observing and participating in this vast cosmic choreography.  

“The installation invites viewers to feel themselves at the center of this dance, even if only for a moment of heightened attention,” he continued. “For me, that moment of contemplation — like suddenly noticing a sunrise or a sky full of stars — is where an artwork truly stays with somebody. 

“This fascination with light and the universe is at the core of my practice, and runs through many of my projects,” he added. 

Indeed, he has just finished directing a new French series for European TV channel ARTE telling “the entire history of the universe — from the Big Bang to the very end of time — through the voice of light itself,” which he hopes to have dubbed into Arabic. All the imagery was created in Hall’s studio “using only physical and chemical phenomena, without CGI or AI.” 

Light art, Hall said, is “universal, immediate, and speaks to people beyond language or cultural background.” He believes Noor Riyadh is playing an important cultural role. 

“It brings together artists from many continents and very different cultures and places them in dialogue with Saudi artists … This mix, and the scale of the festival, make it one of the most exciting platforms for light-based work today.”