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Next exhibition: Alcova Milano 2025
Next exhibition: Alcova Milano 2025
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Modern Aviaries

by Studiolow

  • Designers: Ismaël Rifaï and Héloïse Charital
  • Sponsor: Geo-design platform
  • Website: www.studiolow.fr

Junk is changing the habits of wildlife around the world. White storks—once emblems of migration—are settling down thanks to the food stability offered by open landfills. Although a food scarcity in the 1970s reduced the population of the storks internationally, their numbers have boomed in southern Europe and northern Africa. There were 1,187 storks in Portugal in 1995—there are now approximately 14,000. Despite this, landfills are not the ideal home. Although food is abundant, changing waste habits are impacting the storks. They can become trapped in or eat pieces of plastic and can be shocked by high-voltage electricity cables.

Focusing on landfills at Evora in Portugal, Dos Hermanas in Spain and Kenitra in Morocco, Modern Aviaries depicts open landfills as artificial landscapes. Three sculptures represent the confluence of the natural and the man made, a mountain of junk, a wastewater lake and an electric pole. Together, they act as landmarks of a constructed ecosystem, echoing the effects of the Anthropocene on the world’s systems.

Studiolow’s investigation offers a frame for exploring landfills as architectures of junk, with their own ecosystems and structures built on the waste generated by urban centres nearby.