The wind-powered “Turntable” installation at Cooper’s Poynt Waterfront Park in Camden, N.J., is comprised of three-ply polypropylene face masks, brass grommets, two-liter plastic bottles, chicken wire, plywood and steel. Photos: SLO Architecture. One of the many enduring reminders of the coronavirus pandemic is the sight of used, discarded masks littering public spaces. Amanda Schachter and Alexander Levi of New York City’s SLO Architecture have taken on the idea of unearthing the discarded in “Turntable,” a public installation at Cooper’s Poynt Waterfront Park in Camden, N.J., that turns face masks and plastic bottles into a wind-powered beacon.
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机译:Cooper的Poynt Waterfront Park in Camden,N.J,N.J的风电“转盘”安装由三层聚丙烯面罩,黄铜扣眼,双升塑料瓶,鸡丝,胶合板和钢。 照片:SLO架构。 冠状病毒大流行的众多持久提醒之一是使用使用的丢弃的面具乱扔垃圾的公共空间。 Amanda Schachter和纽约市的SLO架构的亚历山大Levi致力于发掘“转盘”丢弃“转盘”,在库姆登的Cooper's Poynt Waterfront Park的公共安装中,将面部面罩和塑料瓶转变为风力供电 灯塔。
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