Multi-award winning 17 metre high, 40 tonne installation on view at Kew Gardens
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Multi-award winning 17 metre high, 40 tonne installation on view at Kew Gardens
The Hive at Kew Gardens. Photo: Jeff Eden, RBG Kew.



LONDON.- Reconnect with nature this summer at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew as you experience the world of the British bee come alive within Wolfgang Buttress’ award winning installation, The Hive. Conceived as the centrepiece of the UK Pavilion at the 2015 Milan Expo and designed in collaboration with BDP and Simmonds Studio, The Hive is the first ever British Pavilion to be reused and brought back home, and is now located within the stunning landscape of Kew Gardens.

Towering 17 metres high and twisting out of the ground in a shape suggestive of a swarm of bees this magnificent, ever changing space stands as a visual symbol of the pollinators’ role in feeding humanity and the challenges facing bees today. Illuminating talks, tours, activities and films will fill the Gardens, showing visitors how they too can make a difference.

Visitors are being drawn into The Hive via a lush and vibrant wild flower meadow as though they are bees returning to the hive. Once inside, thousands of flickering LED lights bring this 40 tonne lattice structure to life, while an orchestral arrangement sets the mood. After discovering that bees hum in the key of C, a beautiful, complementary symphony of vocals and cello was composed and recorded (and released as an album), to create a calming, meditative soundscape within The Hive, inspired by the deep visceral hum of bees. Triggered by real-time activity within a living beehive located nearby in the Gardens, the sound and light intensity within the space changes as the energy levels in the real hive fluctuate, giving visitors an experiential insight into the life of a bee colony. As dusk falls, the hypnotic pulse of the delicately glowing lights will make the planned series of ‘Hive Lates’ a must-see during September.

The story of pollination continues to come alive for visitors throughout Kew, from enjoying the seasonal array of sumptuous fruit and veg in Kew’s Kitchen Garden, to basking in the British summer on a Pollination Trail across the Gardens, revealing how Kew is exploring and nurturing the special relationship between bees and plants. Individual beehives, housing honey bees, bumblebees and solitary bees take up home in the Gardens, enabling visitors to understand the inner workings of a hive, while the summer holidays are filled with hands on activities for all ages. Drop in talks by Kew’s very own bee experts bring the science to life, while Kew’s kitchen gardener talks plants, pollination and vegetable growing while revealing how bees keep our much loved vegetables, such as tomatoes and strawberries, on the shelves.

Richard Deverell, Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew says: “We are truly delighted to welcome The Hive to Kew, both for its incredible beauty and for the resonance it has with our work – I can think of no better home for this remarkable marriage of architecture and science.

“The Hive creates a powerful, immersive space for us to explore the urgent issues we face in relation to pollinators, their intimate relationships with plants and their vital role in helping us feed a rapidly growing population.”

Wolfgang Buttress, designer of The Hive says: "It’s fantastic to watch The Hive coming back to life at Kew. The Gardens offer the perfect environment to host this multi-sensory experience that integrates art, science and landscape architecture.”

Visitors to The Hive will find themselves absorbed in nature via an immersive journey through a constantly changing space triggered by signals from living bees. A true celebration of British innovation and design, The Hive sits perfectly within the beautiful topography of the Gardens bringing together architecture, science, sound and landscape.










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