Weather Notebook
Bryan Yeaton
 


 
Five Month Cloud
Fri Feb 28, 2003

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Hi, I'm Bryan Yeaton, and this is The Weather Notebook.

If you went to a certain spot in Switzerland last summer, you could have stood inside a very unusual cloud. It formed in May and didn't dissipate until October. The cloud was part of a pavilion called Blur at this year's Swiss Expo. The idea was to build a platform over a Swiss lake and keep it bathed in an artificial cloud, day and night, that you could walk through and savor.



The Blur Building was designed by a husband-and-wife team of architects from New York: Elizabeth Diller and Ricardo Scofidio. They centered their exhibit all around a gigantic outdoor fog machine. More than 30,000 nozzles spit out water droplets so tiny that they stayed suspended in the air. This created a permanent cloud about a half-block wide and more than 60 feet deep. The cloud sat about 300 feet off the lake shore. Visitors put on waterproof ponchos, crossed a bridge made of glass, and strolled through the cloud. You could even walk upstairs to a deck above the cloud, sit down, and sip a refreshing glass of mineral water.



Of course, a good cloud doesn't come cheap. This one cost more than seven million US dollars. But that didn't put a cloud over the project. It was a smash hit. Cirrus-ly.

Bob Henson of Boulder, Colorado, contributed today's story. The Weather Notebook is a production of The Mount Washington Observatory, with support from Subaru, and the National Science Foundation. If you have a question or comment for us, you can e-mail us at questions@weathernotebook.org. Or give us a call -- it's toll free: (888) RAIN-001. Or, you can visit us online at www.weathernotebook.org for an archive of past shows.




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