Balloon Frame is a space of delineated planes that outline the shape of a familiar, yet unrecognizable form. The project aims to echo contemporary pop culture, local street art, and the vivid perceptual experiences of watching parade balloons. Our proposal is made up of 10 intersecting vertical planes which are contoured along its outer edge and inner voids. It is simultaneously an open and continuous space, as it is a series of “frames” and doorways that act as a backdrop for MoMA PS1’s summer weekend events and as a destination for everyday play. Each plane is surfaced with a vivid color rendition of a new three-dimensional form, challenging one’s perception of materiality while creating an immersive experience. These planes are the last iteration of a back-and-forth process where detailed and figural two-dimensional geometry is used to generate a balloon-like three-dimensional form. Horizontally the balloon-like form is sliced at 18″ above the ground to generate seating platforms, while the contours on the ground reflect what would be the shadow of the planes during a late afternoon in June. Balloon Frame looks to synthesize contemporary fabrication techniques with basic but innovative materials. In the same spirit of “balloon frame” construction that was developed to speedily construct lightweight framing to be lifted into place, Balloon Frame is prefabricated into large components and assembled on site. In this proposal each plane is made up of several sheets of a reuseable honeycomb torsion panel. Structural steel is embedded within the honeycomb panels wherever the planes intersect as columns. The crisscross nature of the vertical planes describes the volume in its entirety, becoming a skeleton of a new balloon.