MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY’s cocooned aluminum pavilion rises in north carolina park

MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY’s pavilion rises in north carolina

 

MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY introduces L’île Folie, a sculptural aluminum pavilion rising from the water at Downtown Cary Park in North Carolina. Positioned on a small concrete island and accessed by a bridge, the structure reinterprets the historic architectural folly as a contemporary public space. The project combines digitally fabricated construction with a long-standing landscape tradition, transforming the once whimsical garden ornament into a gathering space for events, performances, and everyday encounters.

 

The architect reimagines the folly through a lightweight, digitally fabricated structure, whose canopy unfolds as a branching, cocoon-like form composed of slender legs and curving elements that gather overhead. The construction relies on ultra-thin folded aluminum panels, precisely fabricated and assembled through riveted connections. In this system, the outer skin acts as the structure itself, eliminating the need for an internal frame. Thousands of small perforations puncture the surface, filtering sunlight into shifting patterns of shadow across the ground below.

all images by Steve Kroodsma

 

 

revisiting the tradition of the park folly

 

The team at MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY draws on the legacy of the architectural folly, a typology commonly found in 19th-century European parks where small, often eccentric structures punctuated the landscape. These pavilions were designed to surprise visitors as they wandered through gardens. L’île Folie revisits this tradition while reframing its meaning for contemporary public life. The French word ‘folie’ refers both to these historic garden structures and to a sense of joyful irrationality. The pavilion embraces that double meaning, appearing almost unexpectedly within the park landscape while maintaining a clear civic role.

 

During the day, the metallic surface of L’île Folie reflects water and sky while the perforations scatter dappled light across the island. After sunset, the structure becomes illuminated from within, resembling a lantern floating at the center of a reflective pond. The island pavilion accommodates weddings, small ceremonies, performances, and informal gatherings, offering a sheltered space within the open park landscape.

 

The installation forms part of Downtown Cary Park, a recently developed public space created as a cultural and social center for the rapidly growing town of Cary, integrating cafés, music venues, water features, and event spaces. 

L’île Folie rises from a circular concrete island within Downtown Cary Park

the cocoon-like aluminum canopy forms a lightweight pavilion

ultra-thin folded aluminum panels create the pavilion’s structural skin

the island pavilion serves as a gathering space for visitors

the branching structure opens to the surrounding landscape through curved apertures

the tessellated aluminum surface is composed of digitally fabricated perforated panels

perforations filter daylight into shifting patterns across the ground below

looking upward, the pavilion’s canopy creates irregular openings that frame the sky

a continuous structural shell

digitally fabricated triangular panels compose the structure

perforations scattered across the panels introduce light and ventilation into the canopy

the triangulated aluminum skin is assembled through riveted joints

the pavilion becomes illuminated at night

evening lighting highlights the pavilion’s sculptural geometry

glowing like a lantern within the park

an opening frames the night sky and crescent moon

 

 

project info:

 

name: L’île Folie

architect: MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY | @theverymany

location: Downtown Cary Park, Cary, North Carolina, United States

 

commissioner: Town of Cary, NC

photographer: Steve Kroodsma | @photo.kroo

The post MARC FORNES / THEVERYMANY’s cocooned aluminum pavilion rises in north carolina park appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

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