Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3

Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3
What will the winter of 2013 be like? Snowy, cloudy, rainy? No one can predict, but one thing is certain: an Arctic wind has been blowing through downtown Montreal since ATOMIC3 introduced Iceberg, an interactive, architectural, light and sound installation that brings winter right into the heart of the city.

ICEBERG, interactive installation from ATOMIC3 on Vimeo.

From north to south, from the Place des Festivals to the Place des Arts esplanade, the installation follows the journey of an iceberg, from its birth in Arctic waters to its melting off the southern coast. It features four “skeletons” representing the Iceberg at four different stages in its life. Four life stages: four different shapes and sizes, four illuminated spaces, and above all, four distinct soundscapes.
Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3
Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3

Centuries old and shaped by time and the elements, icebergs make distinctive sounds. As water enters their cracks and crevasses, they resonate like giant pipe organs, the tones modulating and evolving as these monuments of ice slowly melt.Inspired by that massive instrument, Iceberg is a series of illuminated metal arches that produce distinctive sounds. The arches form a tunnel inviting visitors to enter, listen, and play this giant organ, where notes and light travel up and down musical passageways. As visitors explore the arches, motion sensors inside detect their movements, triggering changes to the lighting and sounds and bringing the iceberg to life. Whether alone or in a group, walking underneath an arch or standing in front of one, each visitor “warms up” the iceberg,
transforming its northern essence into a symphony for both the ears and the eyes.

Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3

Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3
Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3

The size and shape of the structures call to mind a floating glacier, as it moves through the water and melts. Similarly, the different soundscapes provide their own accompaniment to the iceberg’s gradual drift southward. In the north, visitors’ movements trigger sounds from nature, but as they move through the installation, the sounds become richer and more harmonious. As the iceberg glides south, nearer to inhabited coastlines, music emerges brought on by human activity.

The iceberg’s journey ends at the Place des Arts esplanade, where chunks of ice floating at the foot of a cliff are all that remain. Here, only children can enter the tiny tunnels, transforming
them into music boxes. The children, in their innocent play, warm up these ice monsters, barometers warning of global climate changes to come.

Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3
Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3
Iceberg | Montreal Canada | Atomic3
IMAGE CREDIT | Martine Doyon, Montreal Quartier des Spectacles Partnership

ICEBERG
Place des Festivals / Place des Arts esplanade
Quartier des spectacles, Montreal, Canada
Winter 2012-2013

About Damian Holmes 3253 Articles
Damian Holmes is the Founder and Editor of World Landscape Architecture (WLA). He is a registered landscape architect (AILA) working in international design practice in Australia. Damian founded WLA in 2007 to provide a website for landscape architects written by landscape architects. Connect on Linkedin at https://www.linkedin.com/in/damianholmes/