Times Square Heart Competition Winner Features World’s Largest Fresnel Lens

The love-themed installation "Window to the Heart" will be on view for the whole month of February.

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Courtesy ArandaLasch + Marcelo Coelho with Formlabs

Window to the Heart,” is a public art installation designed by New York and Tucson, Ariz.–based design studio ArandaLasch and artist Marcelo Coelho, of Melrose, Mass.–based Marcelo Coelho Studio. The love-themed installation won the 10th iteration of the Times Square Valentine Heart Design Competition—an annual design contest organized by the Times Square Alliance—in November 2017 and will be erected in New York’s Father Duffy Square for the entire month of February.

Courtesy ArandaLasch + Marcelo Coelho with Formlabs

Measuring 12 feet in diameter, “Window to the Heart” is set to be the world’s largest Fresnel lens, a type of compact, lightweight lens that is widely used in lighthouse lamps. Designed and 3D-printed by Somerville, Mass.–based Formlabs, the sculpture’s lens is fabricated using 3D-printed concentric, ring-shaped sections made of clear resin that are thinned down as they draw near the center. According to a release by the Alliance, the lens will “distort and capture the image of Times Square, optically bending light—and attention—to the heart-shaped window at its center.”

“Times Square is a symbol for how we experience our world,” said the designers in the same release. “It is a physical manifestation of our culture, one dispersed and absorbed through cameras and screens. And in this culture, to fall in love you must first fall through a lens.”

Previous winning installations include: “We Were Strangers Once Too” by The Office for Creative Research in 2017; “Heart of Hearts” by Collective-LOK in 2016; and the “HeartBeat” by Stereotank in 2015.

“Window to the Heart” opens Feb. 1 and will remain on view through Feb. 28.

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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