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The Bay Bridge in San Francisco, the lesser known sister to the Golden Gate, was given a new lease of life by light artist Leo Villareal. Philips Colour Kinetics eW Flex was used to create an impressive effect.


BUCK THE TREND


Light artist Leo Villareal is a light art pioneer, using LED as his principle tool he has recently completed the lighting of the Bay Bridge, the biggest public light artwork in the world.


“Everyone is born a genius, but the process of living de-geniuses them,” Buckminster Fuller once said, a man who, by anyone’s standards except perhaps his own, retained and expanded his genius despite the notable hindrance of 87 years of life. Fuller was a 20th century da Vinci, a revolutionary thinker, who’s inherent desire for world peace was based upon his belief that the entire planet was but a single archipelago surrounded by a common sea. His talents ranged from mathematics to metaphysics, he was an educator and a designer, a field in which he created perhaps his best-known invention, the geodesic dome. The dome, which can be most memorably seen at the Eden Project in Cornwall, or forming the famous centrepiece at the Ep- cot Centre at Walt Disney World in Florida, is an eco friendly and sustainable structure, formed from geodesics that intersect to create triangles, which rise upwards into a perfect sphere, a solid structure with all its stresses and tensions flawlessly balanced. Invented in the middle of a housing crisis in the United States, the dome produced an equality of shelter, anyone could build


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