

Reducing the amount of paper we use and recycling are critical and we are becoming more aware of tree-free papers as an environmentally sound alternative to wood pulp paper.
To raise awareness of the need for tree free paper, a built design resembling one large piece of paper will create an immersive space for museum visitors to enter into and engage in an interactive and creative environment.

At the moment Fiberstone paper is one of the most promising alternatives to pulp paper. The concept of the built exhibition design focuses on the fact that stone is the basis of our own built environments.
The bricks of this exhibition structure are represented by oversized post-it pads and this allows the young visitors to use the paper to draw on, which they can then peel off and take with them. The exhibition is aimed at parents and children, each of whom relate to paper in different ways.

To connect with adults and integrate the exhibition information with the built paper structure, a page layout theme will be used across the walls.
Interactive elements include oversized paper flowers (a paper source) books embedded in the floor and walls and post it pad seats.
This will provide a way of engaging both adults and children in the tree free message and encourage discussion.