GOOD-BROKER Art colorful sculptural greenhouses by bigert & bergström visualize future climate scenarios

colorful sculptural greenhouses by bigert & bergström visualize future climate scenarios

colorful sculptural greenhouses by bigert & bergström visualize future climate scenarios post thumbnail image

Bigert & Bergström’s spatial design Visualizes Climate scenarios

In summer of 2025, Swedish artist duo Bigert & Bergström present Broken Greenhouse / Embodied Climate Futures in Lund’s Botanical Garden. The site-specific installation explores projected climate pathways through five sculptural greenhouses. The exhibition is a collaboration between the artists, climate researchers from Umeå University, and the Botanical Garden, using architectural form to visualize the UN’s Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) for the year 2100. Each structure represents a different SSP scenario, translating scientific data into spatial and material experiences.


The Redhouse SSP2, 2025. 360 x 400 x 320 cm | all images by Jean-Baptiste Béranger

Five Climate Futures Interpreted Through Greenhouse Structures

SSP1 takes the form of a tube-shaped green greenhouse designed for circular living. Its systems are synchronized with diurnal rhythms, turning the space into a functioning environmental clock. SSP2 is materialized as an inverted red greenhouse resembling a cottage, where visitors can suspend themselves in a flagpole hammock. A third structure, SSP3, uses the shape of a rising line graph to structure a walk-through installation. Beaded glass curtains represent climate data, allowing visitors to physically engage with abstract metrics. SSP4 is embodied in a fractured greenhouse located in a more isolated section of the garden. Its cracked surfaces evoke a dried-out desert. The final installation, designed by Bigert & Bergström Studio, SSP5, is a brown greenhouse emitting smoke, symbolizing stagnation and high-emission trajectories.


the exhibition challenges viewers to rethink ecological responsibility

Broken Greenhouse installations Interpret Climate Uncertainty

The title Broken Greenhouse references both environmental degradation and the fragile state of current systems. The idea that climate change is beyond human control has been overturned, and the effects of greenhouse gas emissions are now firmly acknowledged. Bigert & Bergström’s installation invites reflection on these realities while exploring how future scenarios might be understood, anticipated, or reshaped. The subtitle Embodied Climate Futures reflects the project’s aim to visualize multiple scenarios, offering physical spaces that invite reflection on climate trajectories and potential responses.

bigert-bergstrom-broken-greenhouse-embodied-climate-futures-installation-sweden-designboom-1800-2

Broken Greenhouse unfolds at Lund’s Botanical Garden


The Linechart Greenhouse SSP3, 2025. 400 x 750 x 300 cm


Bigert & Bergström collaborate with climate researchers and garden curators


The Pipedream SSP1, 2025. 310 x 600 x 300 cm


each greenhouse embodies a different climate scenario for the year 2100


spatial design translates scientific projections into physical experience


A Road Divided SSP4, 2025. 350 x 465 x 460 cm


architectural form becomes a tool for engaging with climate data

bigert-bergstrom-broken-greenhouse-embodied-climate-futures-installation-sweden-designboom-1800-3

the installation brings abstract futures into tangible view


Preppers Delight SSP5, 2025. 200 x 400 x 240 cm


the exhibition addresses the human role in shaping climate outcomes


structures invite reflection on planetary vulnerability and resilience

project info:

name: Broken Greenhouse / Embodied Climate Futures
designer: Bigert & Bergström | @studiobigertbergstrom

dates: May 24th – September 20th, 2025

photographer: Jean-Baptiste Béranger | @jeanbaptisteberanger

designboom has received this project from our DIY submissions feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication. see more project submissions from our readers here.

edited by: christina vergopoulou | designboom

The post colorful sculptural greenhouses by bigert & bergström visualize future climate scenarios appeared first on designboom | architecture & design magazine.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

Related Post