Including Earth, space, seas and smart cities

“Technological bubbles” simulate tomorrow at the Japan Pavilion at “Expo”

The pavilion showed visitors bubbles inside the innovation room as a symbol of the attempt to protect the planet.

From the source

Through its pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai, Japan revealed its most advanced technologies, within the framework of the "Tokyo 2025" vision, for a world free of waste, predicting disasters and protecting the planet, which coincides with the concepts of sustainability advocated by the World Expo.

The pavilion presented to Expo visitors, inside the Innovation Room, a model divided into four sectors: land, space, seas and smart cities, through innovative creative ideas, through “miniatures” inside glass bubbles, as a symbol of trying to protect the planet from the dangers it faces.

This room contains more than 120 miniatures from the Japanese art of "mitati".

And “miniatures” are pictures decorated in miniature models using the simplest materials, in order to simplify and explain the most complex technologies in the world. Mitati art in Japanese culture aims to push people to think and explore innovative solutions to the problems facing the planet, from a new perspective and repurpose them.

Through miniature models inside the glass bubbles, these "miniatures" formed unconventional ideas to protect the earth, through innovative methods of cultivation using the latest advanced technologies.

"Tsunami Warning"

Visitors to “Expo 2020” moved to the bubbles of the sea, and Japan presented its most prominent findings in the field of disaster prediction, through “tsunami warning” technology, as “tsunami” centers in Japan monitor the occurrence of tsunami waves and earthquakes that cause them, predict their effects, and prepare and issue messages. Tsunami to itself and to international partners, tsunami messages include alert levels, warnings, instructions, watches, and data information, in order to preserve life.

travel

Through space bubbles, the visitors explored the latest technology for space travel, and a model of the Japanese missile that carries the first locally-made satellite for the UAE, where the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency launched the “Khalifa-Sat” satellite to monitor the Earth from a space center in Taniga, southern Japan.

Regarding the partnership with the UAE Space Agency, the officials of the Japan Pavilion expressed their pride in cooperating with the UAE, in the framework of the ambitious space program to penetrate the world of space and explore Mars, through the “H2A” missile made by Mitsubishi, in an attempt to map atmospheric changes on the planet. the Red.

innovations

The Japan Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai invites visitors to explore a number of innovations that will change our way of life through the experience of “future cities” placed inside glass bubbles to protect the planet from pollution and environmental disasters, through the sustainability system in the forms of construction and smart mobility.

water circulation

The visitors watched the “Wata” device, which recirculates the water in order to use safe water again, in line with the idea of ​​sustainability. By displaying and installing three hand washing platforms inside the suite, in order to recirculate water “WOSH” to provide opportunities for hand washing.

Japanese pavilion officials confirmed that WATA has been selected as a final candidate for the "Earth Shot" environmental award, affiliated to the Royal Institution of the United Kingdom and founded by Prince William, to create a world free of waste, an ambitious global environmental award that aims to find the best solutions to reform the earth in the coming years. and expanding its implementation.

High tech experience

The Japan Pavilion at Expo 2020 Dubai is based on the concept of "participation - harmony - work", and includes a high-tech experience, and its logo is an image composed of people holding hands in a scene that transcends race, age and gender, by bringing people together and exchanging feelings. .


• The vision of "Tokyo 2025" aligns with the concepts of sustainability called for by the World Expo.