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Winter Stations is Back for 2021 With a Special Spring Showing in a New Location

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Winter Stations’ 2021 Return with Safe Socially Distanced Design

After a months-long postponement, Winter Stations is back – sort of. It’s been renamed Spring Stations for 2021 and relocated to the Distillery District, but it’s still the perfect way to explore design – from a distance – in the city

For more than a year now, the outdoors has been a haven, the city’s public spaces our collective balm. Now that spring is here, the city needs us just as much as we need it: getting outside keeps it alive.

From Small Beginnings art installation at Spring Stations 2021, by Jack Leather and Charlie Leather.

From Small Beginnings, by Jack Leather and Charlie Leather. Photo courtesy of Winter Stations.

Since 2015, Winter Stations has transformed, for a six-week span of deep winter, lifeguard stands along the Beaches with installations by global designers. After postponing 2021’s event due to Covid-19, the organizers are mounting a safe, socially distanced and relocated Winter Stations – ahem, Spring Stations – featuring its four winning designs in the Distillery District. How you experience it is up to you, so it makes perfect poetic sense that this year’s theme is “Refuge.”

The Epitonium art installation at the Distillery District

The Epitonium, by Shahed M. Yengiabad, Elaheh M. Yengiabad, Alemeh M. Yengiabad and Mojtaba Anoosha. Photo courtesy of Winter Stations.

One of the installations is the whimsical Arc de Blob. This creation by Iheartblob – a Vienna-based “mixed-reality” studio led by Aleksandra Belitskaja, Ben James and Shaun McCallum – seeks to bridge architecture and augmented reality by turning a classic, Arc de triomphe–like monument into an acid-hued artwork that can be experienced from various distances with the use of an AR app. That is, you can physically enter its portal and see – and digitally manipulate – its architectural details up close; you can take it in from further afield, pointing your smartphone at it to virtually bring it close to you; or you can appreciate it from the comfort of your own personal bubble.

Throbber art installation at Spring Stations 2021, by Heidundgriess

Throbber, by Heidundgriess. Photo courtesy of Winter Stations.

“The arch is both a shelter and a doorway – a portal into another world,” says Belitskaja. “And the animations that make up its architectural ornaments show that architecture doesn’t have to be static – it can always change.” If life itself has felt stagnant for the last year, it’s time to change things up by exploring new refuges, through design. WINTERSTATIONS.COM

Spring Stations is on from now until late July.

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The Bentway’s playful installation of 50 trees in shopping carts shines a light on climate resilience and green equity

In a city grappling with rising temperatures, accelerated development and increasing inequity in green space accessibility, Moving Forest arrives not as a solution, but as an invitation to rethink our relationship with nature. Designed by NL Architects as a part of The Bentway’s Sun/Shade exhibition, this outlandish yet purposeful installation transforms a fleet of 50 shopping carts into mobile vessels for native trees—red maples, silver maples, sugar maples and autumn blaze—that roll through some of Toronto’s most sun-scorched plazas, creating impromptu oases of shade and community.

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