• The Canadian pavilion, designed by architect
Arthur Erickson, featured two
National Film Board of Canada productions:
The Land, a look at Canada from coast to coast, filmed for the most part from a low-flying aircraft, as well as the
animated short The City, directed by
Kaj Pindal. Montreal artist and architect
Melvin Charney had submitted a radically different design for the Canadian pavilion, fashioned from construction cranes and scaffolding, which was rejected. ) • The West German pavilion, designed by
Fritz Bornemann, featured the world's first spherical concert hall, based on artistic concepts by
Karlheinz Stockhausen. The pavilion theme was "gardens of music", in keeping with which Bornemann "planted" the exhibition halls beneath a broad lawn, with the connected auditorium "sprouting" above ground. Inside, the audience was surrounded by 50 loudspeaker groups in seven rings at different "latitudes" around the interior walls of the sphere. Sound was sent around the space in three dimensions using either a spherical controller designed by Fritz Winckel of the Electronic Music Studio at
Technische Universität Berlin, or a ten-channel "rotation mill" constructed to Stockhausen's design. Works by
Johann Sebastian Bach,
Ludwig van Beethoven,
Bernd Alois Zimmermann, and
Boris Blacher were played from multi-track tape. As the main feature, however, Stockhausen was invited to present five-and-a-half-hour live programs of his music every day over a period of 183 days to a total audience of about a million listeners. In the course of the exhibition, 19 performers in Stockhausen's ensemble gave concerts for over a million visitors. "Many visitors felt the spherical auditorium to be an oasis of calm amidst the general hubbub, and after a while it became one of the main attractions of Expo 1970". • The USSR pavilion was the tallest in the fairgrounds, a sweeping red and white design by Soviet architect
Mikhail V. Posokhin. • The U.S. pavilion was an air-supported dome, a joint design by architects
Davis Brody and structural engineer
David H. Geiger • The Netherlands pavilion was the work of Carel Weeber and
Jaap Bakema. • The Hong Kong pavilion, topped by sails that were raised and lowered twice daily, was designed by Alan Fitch, W. Szebo & Partners. • The Philippine Pavilion was designed by renowned Filipino Architect
Leandro Locsin and was very well received and was judged as one of the ten most popular pavilions at the exhibition with its dramatic roof sweeping up from the ground using fine Philippine hardwoods and other native materials. == Other attractions ==