hundreds of suspended mirrors turn iranian pavilion into a shifting light machine

Mirror Pavilion marries algorithmic design and Iranian tradition

 

The Mirror Pavilion by Ehsani Sharafeh Associates examines the relationship between traditional Iranian architectural principles and contemporary computational design. The project combines historical references with algorithmic processes to construct a spatial environment defined by light, color, and reflection.

 

Commissioned in 2020 by Mashhad Municipality, the pavilion is located within a former Coca-Cola factory in Mashhad, now repurposed as an innovation hub. The intervention occupies a cubic void within a larger pyramidal hypostyle hall, formed by the absence of a structural module. The design responds to this context by introducing a self-supporting cubic structure that establishes a clear spatial distinction from the surrounding early modernist framework.

 

The architectural language draws from traditional Iranian precedents, where spatial experience is shaped through the controlled use of light, color, and reflective surfaces. These principles are reinterpreted through algorithmic design methods, allowing for the generation of complex geometries and patterned arrangements. The pavilion’s ceiling departs from conventional vault forms, instead developing a three-dimensional sinusoidal surface produced by the merging of four pyramidal geometries.

all images courtesy of Ehsani Sharafeh Associates

 

 

suspended mirrors and stained glass compose a shifting pavilion

 

This surface is clad in a system of fragmented mirrors arranged through computational processes. Each mirror is mounted on a Plexiglas panel attached to steel plates and suspended from a network of beams. The configuration and positioning of approximately four hundred mirrored elements are determined through parametric workflows, producing a layered field of reflections that changes with movement and light conditions.

 

A grid of stained glass panels is introduced along one facade, referencing precedents such as Nasir al-Mulk Mosque in Shiraz. This element filters daylight into the interior, projecting colored light onto the floor surface and contributing to the overall spatial composition. The floor, finished in a neutral material, acts as a reflective plane that registers these light conditions. Structurally, the pavilion is organized through a steel framework composed of slender columns and beams, anchored to a concealed concrete foundation. The stained glass facade also contributes to lateral stability, integrating structural and environmental functions within a single system.

 

Through the coordination of material systems, geometry, and light, the Mirror Pavilion establishes a spatial sequence that transitions from a restrained base condition to a visually active overhead field. The project by Ehsani Sharafeh Associates’ design team situates traditional architectural strategies within a contemporary design process, using computation to reinterpret established spatial effects within a new context.

a cubic pavilion inserted within a former industrial hall

self-supporting structure contrasts with the existing hypostyle framework

colored light projections activate the floor surface

ceiling geometry formed by the merging of four pyramids

stained glass grid filters daylight into the interior

light, color, and reflection define the spatial experience

slender steel structure supports the suspended ceiling system

fragmented mirrors generate a dynamic reflective field

algorithmic design informs geometry and spatial rhythm

 

project info:

 

name: Mirror Pavilion

architect: Ehsani Sharafeh Associates
design team: Nasrin Sharafeh – Ali Ehsani – Milad GholamiFard
location: Mashhad, Iran

 

 

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

 

edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom

The post hundreds of suspended mirrors turn iranian pavilion into a shifting light machine appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

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