Architects and Designers Bake the Gingerbread City of the Future

On view until Jan. 6, the Museum of Architecture's Gingerbread City exhibition features more than 60 edible buildings by U.K.–based firms including Zaha Hadid Architects, Foster + Partners, and NBBJ.

2 MIN READ
Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Gingerbread City 2018

For the third year in a row, U.K.–based architects, designers, and engineers, have come together to create an edible city for the Museum of Architecture‘s Gingerbread City exhibition in London. This year’s edition, hosted by the Victoria and Albert Museum, revolves around the theme of “imagining the future city,” according to the exhibition’s website. Designed based on a masterplan by London-based Tibbalds Planning and Urban Design, this year’s miniature city is made entirely of gingerbread and features more than 60 structures, including a movie theater, a museum, a sports stadium, high-rise office blocks, botanical gardens, and riverside houses.

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Exhibition highlights include the “SugarLoop” highline by London-based Apt; the “Exploration Pavilion” (built using a combination of robotic technologies and traditional baking methods) by Foster + Partners; a homeless shelter with a community cafe, work space, and local shops, by London-based Holland Harvey Architects; the “Bakewell Bridge”—a tribute to cultures around the world—by London-based Hopkins Architects; elevated green spaces and artificial waterfalls by NBBJ‘s London office; and Zaha Hadid Architects‘ opera house inspired by the firm’s signature designs. Other participating firms include HawkinsBrown, Arup, Bell Phillips Architects, and Seven Architecture, all based in London.

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Zaha Hadid ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Zaha Hadid ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Sugarloop by AptPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Sugarloop by AptPart of Gingerbread City 2018

“We need to be looking forwards in terms of how we make our cities better for all that live and work in them,” said Tibbalds director Hilary Satchwell in a press release. “It has been really exciting this year to set the Gingerbread City 2018 theme around how our future cities might work. For Tibbalds this isn’t about some dystopian vision about the future but about how real places can work for all of us and how we can live in well designed, attractive, and lively places—and ideally that are a bit more long lasting than these gingerbread ones!”

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Bakewell Bridge by Hopkins ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Bakewell Bridge by Hopkins ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

LSI ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

LSI ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

The Manser Practice Architects + DesignersPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

The Manser Practice Architects + DesignersPart of Gingerbread City 2018

EPR ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

EPR ArchitectsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Exploration Pavilion by Foster + PartnersPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Exploration Pavilion by Foster + PartnersPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Exploration Pavilion by Foster + PartnersPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Exploration Pavilion by Foster + PartnersPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Stanton WilliamsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Stanton WilliamsPart of Gingerbread City 2018

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

Luke Hayes

Part of Gingerbread City 2018

The Gingerbread City Exhibition will be on view until Jan. 6, 2019, at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London.

About the Author

Ayda Ayoubi

Ayda Ayoubi is a former assistant editor of products and technology for ARCHITECT. She holds master degrees in urban ecological planning from Norwegian University of Science and Technology and in world heritage studies from Brandenburg University of Technology. In the past, she interned with UN-Habitat's New York liaison office and the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property in Rome.

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