| We are surrounded by the ordinary. Unlike older buildings shaped by craft traditions and layered histories of use, much of today’s built environment is defined by repetition and banality. To us in the words of Charlotte Malterre-Bartes: “everything is heritage”. Our work within the framework of the existing built environment includes: |
Architecture is often seen as the creation of the architect alone. However, architecture is a collaborative endeavour, drawing on diverse labour – from design contributions by architects and engineers to the efforts of construction workers, maintenance staff, cleaners, and restoration architects, all of whom play vital roles in the creation and upkeep of the built environment.
The exhibition traces the story of the Pavilion of Finland, designed by architect Alvar Aalto and his office, from its construction in 1956, through three major restorations and decades of continuous maintenance, to today. It delves into the labour required to ensure the longevity of architecture and positions the people involved in this work as co-creators alongside the original architect.
Through immersive multi-channel video projections and sound art, the exhibition brings to life the memories embedded within the pavilion’s walls. Through these stories, the exhibition invites visitors to see the space from new perspectives and uncovers aspects that are typically hidden.
Preserving built heritage depends on stewardship – a shared duty between architects and non-architects, requiring the negotiation of land, resources, and the built environment and considering the needs of humans and non-humans alike. The Pavilion – Architecture of Stewardship aspires to make the invisible visible.
The exhibition is comissioned & produced by Archinfo Finland
Curated by Ella Kaira & Matti Jänkälä
Video art by Merle Karp
Sound design by Jussi Hertz
Exhibition architecture by Antti Auvinen
Graphic design by Samuli Saarinen
THE PAVILION OF FINLAND IN PRESS
YLE Kulttuuriykkönen
Dezeen
The Guardian
NSS Magazine
Architecture Today
Stirworld
Designboom
Wallpaper
Archdaily
Rondine
World Architecture
The exhibition is accompanied by an independent publication Architecture of Stewardship. By recounting the Pavilion’s history, this book illustrates that buildings are not static objects but dynamic processes influenced by human actions, global politics and non-human forces. The collection of essays offers perspectives on stewardship from Finnish and Italian contributors in academia, practice, and activism, and explores how people have stewarded land, resources, and communities throughout the Pavilion’s history and its Venetian context.
Editors and Authors
Ella Kaira & Matti Jänkälä
Contributors
Stefano Ferro, Lodovica Guarnieri, Jonas Malmberg, Ila Narjus, Essi Nisonen, Pietro Daniel Omodeo, Veronica Pecile, Sofie Pelsmakers, Margherita Scapin, Carolyn Smith, Gianni Talamini, Federica Toninello
Graphic Design
Samuli Saarinen
Published by
Arvinius + Orfeus Publishing in collaboration with Archinfo – Information Centre for Finnish Architecture
ISBN 978-91-89270-97-8
MERIRASTI MULTIFUNCTIONAL BUILDING COMPETITION
In the spring of 2024, we collaborated with landscape architect Kaisla Rahkola on an architectural competition for a new multipurpose building in East Helsinki’s Meri-Rastila neighborhood. The project aimed to integrate a school, daycare center, and youth center while balancing new construction with the thoughtful reuse of existing structures.
With support from FEMMA Planning, we held workshops with residents and school staff to assess the strengths and challenges of the current buildings. These sessions helped envision how the new complex could best serve its users.
Our proposal focused on preserving the site’s existing buildings, connecting them with extensions while demolishing only the janitor’s house for new functions.
The yard design honored natural features, preserving trees, the forest floor, and open rock areas while repurposing playground equipment. Rooftop play spaces, a public path from Fokkatori to Haruspuisto, and a rooftop garden enhanced community access.
LA BOCA DEL ESPOLÓN
La Boca del Espolón is an audio installation proposal for the Concéntrico Festival 2026. It gathers the voices and sounds that shape Logroño today: spoken stories, ambient sounds, and the presence of more-than-human life.
During the festival, the recordings are played through a wooden structure shaped like an oversized horn, functioning as an analogue loudspeaker. Visitors are invited to approach, sit, rest, and listen—encountering the city through sound.
The installation enters into dialogue with one of the Paseo del Espolón’s most recognisable landmarks: the Concha del Espolón. Designed by Jaime Carceller and inaugurated in 1954, this shell-shaped auditorium—modelled on a similar structure in San Francisco—has hosted generations of concerts, from military bands to popular music, embedding sound in the civic life of Logroño. Conceived as a contemporary counterpart, La Boca del Espolón mirrors its acoustic role while shifting the focus from performance to attentive listening.