Walking toward People Pavilion, the first impression arrives before any explanation. A broad installation stretches across the plaza, open and unguarded, coaxing passersby closer without instruction. Curiosity does the rest. This isn’t a pavilion built to be admired from a distance. It works as a testing ground, asking how Bangkok’s urban framework might feel if restraint and generosity shared equal weight. Every choice here leans towards using less and leaving lighter traces, without draining the experience of pleasure. Structure and use are considered together, making sustainability feel practical rather than worthy. Art brushes up against architecture, with environmental thinking threaded quietly through both. Visitors aren’t rushed through. You’re encouraged to sit, drift, linger. The pavilion becomes a soft rehearsal for a city that values rest as much as movement, offering a glimpse of how public space could feel kinder to bodies and surroundings alike.
Until February 8. Free. Phranakhon, 11am-10pm

