Replacing its 2018 predecessor, the Rolex Pavilion Venice Biennale 2025 re‑enters the Giardini as a circular manifesto: reclaimed timber, Murano glass, terrazzo made with crushed Cotisso, and AI‑tuned climate tech. Swiss precision meets lagoon craft, all under curator Carlo Ratti’s larger theme, “Intelligens: Natural. Artificial. Collective.”
Rolex Pavilion 2025: Venice’s Recycled Timber Jewel at Intelligens
Mariam Issoufou’s recycled‑wood Rolex Pavilion anchors the 2025 Venice Architecture Biennale, fusing local craft, Murano glass, and AI‑driven climate tech.
Por: Angela Leon Cervera

Why Call in Architect Mariam Issoufou?
Rolex tapped Mariam Issoufou, the Nigerien talent behind pioneering eco‑schools in Africa, to translate the brand’s “built‑to‑last” ethos. Her brief: honor Rolex’s fluted bezel, channel Venice’s sinuous island plan, and keep every component locally sourced or recycled.
Rolex Pavilion Venice Biennale 2025 – Design Fast Facts
Form Echoes Venice: Plan view mirrors the Grand Canal’s S‑curve splitting the island.
Fluted Timber Facade: Salvaged beams milled by Venetian carpenters mimic the ridged watch bezel.
Murano Light Canopy: Colored glass panels shift chroma through the day, casting a kinetic dial of hues.
Terrazzo 2.0: Flooring aggregates Cotisso recycled glass shards—waste reborn as sparkle.
AI‑Assisted Ventilation: Sensors teach louvres to breathe, cutting HVAC energy by 40 %.


Exhibitions Inside: Rolex & Architecture in Three Acts
Building the Pavilion – Behind‑the‑timber film on sourcing, CNC milling, and hand‑chisel joinery.
Beirut Research Lab – A micro‑study on climate‑adaptive façades spearheaded by Rolex‑funded scholars.
Boutique Revivals – Case studies on circular refurbishments in Milan and Tokyo, proving luxury retail can go low‑carbon.
Local Craft, Global Message
Issoufou’s use of lagoon woodworkers and Murano glassblowers channels collective intelligens, aligning with Biennale’s push for community‑driven design. Rolex’s recycled‑timber halo signals a quiet flex: longevity is the ultimate sustainability.

The Rolex Pavilion is more than a sponsor box; it’s Venice distilled into recycled wood and prismatic glass, elevated by AI ventilation. In a Biennale about collective intelligens, Issoufou proves luxury can walk lightly—and still shine. Whisper your wish under the Murano canopy; Venice may just recycle it into the future.
Rolex Pavilion Venice Biennale 2025
- When can I visit? Daily 10 a.m.–6 p.m.; last entry 5:30. Night sessions (with holographic drone shows) every Friday at 9 p.m.
- Is the pavilion zero-carbon? Operationally yes; embodied carbon offset via reforestation in Italy’s storm-hit Vaia forests.
- Tickets needed? Included in Biennale pass (€30). Book time slots online to avoid queues longer than the Grand Canal.
- Will the AI harvest my data? Only anonymous heat-map metrics—Rolex isn’t mining your selfies, promise.
- Where’s the best photo spot? Stand on the floating jetty at 4 p.m.; golden-hour reflections make the wood glow like whiskey.