Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Canadian_Pavilion> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 71 of
71
with 100 triples per page.
- Canadian_Pavilion abstract "The Canadian Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal featured an inverted pyramid structure as well as a walk through attraction called the "People Tree." The pavilion had its highest single-day attendance on Canada Day (July 1), 1967. The pavilion's large inverted pyramid was called Katimavik, which is the Inuit word for "Gathering Place". The pyramid was nine storeys tall and supported by four columns. The building at its base housed a rotating theatre, which used moving wedge-shaped chambers to bring audiences from one screening to the next, making a complete revolution every half-hour. Smaller linked pyramids at ground level housed the exhibits "The Land of Canada," "The Growth of Canada" and "The Challenge to Canadians and Canada and the World." The pavilion was located on a 30,285 sq metre lot near the southern end of Île Notre-Dame. It cost $24 million to build. The inverted pyramid was a 1000-ton structure, with a hollow steel frame. Open to the sky, its four inner sloping walls featured giant sculptures of a sun dial, hour glass, compass and Kyogen and Haida masks.".
- Canadian_Pavilion thumbnail Expo_67,_pavillon_du_Canada_et_sa_pyramide_inversée_(_le_Katimavik).jpg?width=300.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageID "33737535".
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageLength "5969".
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageOutDegree "37".
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageRevisionID "678700033".
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Arcop.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Erickson.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Ashworth,_Robbie,_Vaughan_and_Williams_Architects_and_Planners.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Autumn_leaf_color.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Autumn_leaf_colour.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Canada_Day.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Buildings_and_structures_completed_in_1967.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Demolished_buildings_and_structures_in_Montreal.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Expo_67.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Inverted_pyramids.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Modernist_architecture_in_Canada.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Symbols_of_Canada.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Category:Worlds_fair_architecture_in_Canada.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Colin_Vaughan.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Evans_St._Gelais.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Expo_67.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink H._Leslie_Brown.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Haida_people.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Hour_glass.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Hourglass.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink John_C._Parkin.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Katimavik.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Kyogen.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Kyōgen.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Maple.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Maple_tree.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Matt_Stankiewicz.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Mitchell_Sharp.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Montreal.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Notre_Dame_Island.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Schoeler.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Pyramid.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Rod_Robbie.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Schoeler,_Barkham_and_Heaton_Architects_and_Planning_Consultants.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Sun_dial.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Sundial.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Z._Matthew_Stankiewicz_Architect.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Édouard_Fiset.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink Île_Notre-Dame.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink File:Expo_67,_pavillon_du_Canada_et_sa_pyramide_inversée_(_le_Katimavik).jpg.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink File:Pavillon_du_Canada_xc3xa0_lExpo_67_(3).jpg.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLink File:Pierre_Dupuy_devant_le_pavillon_du_Canada_en_construction_pour_Expo_67.jpg.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLinkText "Canadian Pavilion".
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageWikiLinkText "Canadian Pavilion#People Tree".
- Canadian_Pavilion hasPhotoCollection Canadian_Pavilion.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commonscat.
- Canadian_Pavilion wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Canadian_Pavilion subject Category:Buildings_and_structures_completed_in_1967.
- Canadian_Pavilion subject Category:Demolished_buildings_and_structures_in_Montreal.
- Canadian_Pavilion subject Category:Expo_67.
- Canadian_Pavilion subject Category:Inverted_pyramids.
- Canadian_Pavilion subject Category:Modernist_architecture_in_Canada.
- Canadian_Pavilion subject Category:Symbols_of_Canada.
- Canadian_Pavilion subject Category:Worlds_fair_architecture_in_Canada.
- Canadian_Pavilion type Attraction.
- Canadian_Pavilion type Fair.
- Canadian_Pavilion type Style.
- Canadian_Pavilion comment "The Canadian Pavilion at Expo 67 in Montreal featured an inverted pyramid structure as well as a walk through attraction called the "People Tree." The pavilion had its highest single-day attendance on Canada Day (July 1), 1967. The pavilion's large inverted pyramid was called Katimavik, which is the Inuit word for "Gathering Place". The pyramid was nine storeys tall and supported by four columns.".
- Canadian_Pavilion label "Canadian Pavilion".
- Canadian_Pavilion sameAs m.0hhr2yz.
- Canadian_Pavilion sameAs Q5030458.
- Canadian_Pavilion sameAs Q5030458.
- Canadian_Pavilion wasDerivedFrom Canadian_Pavilion?oldid=678700033.
- Canadian_Pavilion depiction Expo_67,_pavillon_du_Canada_et_sa_pyramide_inversée_(_le_Katimavik).jpg.
- Canadian_Pavilion isPrimaryTopicOf Canadian_Pavilion.