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Love for Times Square

MIT professor, PhD candidate design Valentine’s Day pavilion for New York City.
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Collective-LOK, a collaboration including MIT Professor William O’Brien Jr. and PhD candidate Michael Kubo, will transform New York City’s Times Square for Valentine’s Day, with a dynamic pavilion of mirrored hearts that will both enclose space and reflect scenes of romantic revelers.
Caption:
Collective-LOK, a collaboration including MIT Professor William O’Brien Jr. and PhD candidate Michael Kubo, will transform New York City’s Times Square for Valentine’s Day, with a dynamic pavilion of mirrored hearts that will both enclose space and reflect scenes of romantic revelers.
Credits:
Image courtesy Collective-LOK.
Collective-LOK's pavilion — called “Heart of Hearts” — is a faceted ring of golden, mirrored hearts whose interior space will reach 10-feet high and form diamond-shaped “kissing booths” inside each heart.
Caption:
Collective-LOK's pavilion — called “Heart of Hearts” — is a faceted ring of golden, mirrored hearts whose interior space will reach 10-feet high and form diamond-shaped “kissing booths” inside each heart.
Credits:
Image courtesy Collective-LOK.
Collective-LOK's proposal won the 2015 Times Square Heart Competition, an annual event that invites proposals from architecture and design firms. "It’s truly a special opportunity to provide a space for intimacy and performance in the heart of the city, one we hope visitors will love," the architects said.
Caption:
Collective-LOK's proposal won the 2015 Times Square Heart Competition, an annual event that invites proposals from architecture and design firms. "It’s truly a special opportunity to provide a space for intimacy and performance in the heart of the city, one we hope visitors will love," the architects said.
Credits:
Image courtesy Collective-LOK.

A professor and PhD student from the Department of Architecture are part of a design team that will transform New York City’s Times Square for Valentine’s Day, with a dynamic pavilion of mirrored hearts that will both enclose space and reflect scenes of romantic revelers.

Designed by Collective–LOK, the pavilion — called “Heart of Hearts” — is a faceted ring of golden, mirrored hearts whose interior space will reach 10-feet high and form diamond-shaped “kissing booths” inside each heart. The love-ly design was selected as this year’s winner of an annual competition to create a romantic public art installation to celebrate Valentine’s Day in Times Square.

Curated by the Center for Architecture and run by the Times Square Alliance, the Times Square Heart Competition invites proposals from architecture and design firms. "The cacophony of Times Square is a tough place to celebrate the tender passion of Saint Valentine. But Collective–LOK has pulled it off with mirrored golden hearts that create a kaleidoscopic reflection of all who walk through them,” said David Burney, fellow of the American Institute of Architects and interim executive director of the American Institute of Architects New York and Center for Architecture. “It is both a stage and an enclosure — a room-within-the-room of Times Square that will invite participatory celebration of Valentine's anniversary.”

Collective–LOK is an architectural collaboration formed by William O’Brien Jr., an associate professor of architecture at MIT; Michael Kubo, a PhD candidate in the History, Theory, and Criticism of Architecture at MIT; and Jon Lott, a design critic in architecture at the Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

O’Brien is also a principal at WOJR: Organization for Architecture, an independent design practice in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Kubo co-directs pinkcomma gallery in Boston and is a pre-doctoral fellow at the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts (CASVA) at the National Gallery of Art for 2015-2017.

“We are thrilled to create the Heart of Hearts for Valentine’s Day, an engagement ring for our love affair with the spectacle of Times Square,” the three architects said in a statement. “It’s truly a special opportunity to provide a space for intimacy and performance in the heart of the city, one we hope visitors will love.”

"Heart of Hearts" will be unveiled on Feb. 9, 2016 and remain on view through March 6, 2016 at Father Duffy Square, between 46th and 47th Streets.

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