Festival of Transitional Architecture
The Festival of Transitional Architecture, or FESTA for short, occurred in Christchurch, New Zealand. It involved temporary architectural installations and events such as workshops, walks and talks. The festival was annual from 2012 to 2014 inclusive and was biennial from then until 2018, when it took place for the final time. Each of the festivals were produced and directed by Jessica Halliday.
History
The festivals included carnivals featuring temporary architectural installations made by New Zealand and Australian architectural students. The installations are examples of "transitional architecture", temporary projects made to transition the city from pre-to-post 2010 and 2011 Canterbury earthquakes, using spaces that had become vacant after earthquake-damaged buildings were demolished. The festival also included several smaller events including workshops, walks and talks. Each of the festivals from 2012 to 2018 were produced and directed by the architectural historian Jessica Halliday. Festa was succeeded by the charity Te Pūtahi – Christchurch Centre for Architecture and City-making, which creates city architectural events. In 2019 the organisation ran 11 events in 11 weeks, called Open Christchurch.2012
The 2012 festival lasted for 10 days and had 16 temporary structures involving light, making up what was called LuxCity. Components of these included projectors, lasers, balloons and demolition cranes with fabric hanging from them. Events included a tour of the replacement of Lancaster Park, lectures and workshops. Between 20 and 30 thousand people attended. According to Stuff, the event "was viewed as the most successful creative public event of the year" in Christchurch.2013
The 2013 festival included a Canterbury Tales parade in view of under 2,000 spectators who could walk on the streets that the parade was happening on. It included five large puppets, including a six-metre-tall Wife of Bath and a five-metre-tall Scholar, as well as six smaller friar puppets. The parade happened on two separate nights and went from the Bridge of Remembrance to Cathedral Square. The festival included several other smaller elements, such as Picture House, a trailer-mounted cinema that could fit two people. It travelled to sites that had picture theatres before the earthquakes. There was also an communal garden called Agropolis in the former Poplar Lane that started with seven planter boxes and composted green waste from two nearby restaurants. On empty land at 136 Manchester Street there was a pop-up sauna.2014
The 2014 festival's flagship event was called CityUps, a "street party" on High Street which had installations designed by over 250 university and polytechnic students. The festival had 14 major installations, including:- Orbis, which had water balloons that rarely broke hanging off a ceiling using cloth sleeves. People would swing the balloons around.
- Equilibrium, a large cube made of waving white cloth. It was a night club for dancing and had projectors projecting images onto the cloth and had music playing.
- Another installation, created by students of the University of Auckland, was called AntiGravity and a ball made of traffic cones arranged into a sphere and several other cones on walls in a wavy pattern. It also had flashing lights, rock and roll music and fake smoke.