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- Expo 67 United States Pavilion Button, 1967 - Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended World's Fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This button implies that, even at the time, the design was recognizable without additional text needed.

- 1967
- Collections - Artifact
Expo 67 United States Pavilion Button, 1967
Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended World's Fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This button implies that, even at the time, the design was recognizable without additional text needed.
- Expo 67 United States Pavilion Souvenir Tray, 1967 - Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended world's fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, was an interactive environmental exhibit. It remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This pavilion survives today as an attraction called the Biosphere.

- 1967
- Collections - Artifact
Expo 67 United States Pavilion Souvenir Tray, 1967
Expo 67, held in Montreal, Canada, was the most attended world's fair of the 20th century. The United States pavilion, a 250-foot-diameter geodesic dome designed by visionary Buckminster Fuller and architect Shoji Sadao, was an interactive environmental exhibit. It remains the most iconic and fondly remembered of Fuller's built designs. This pavilion survives today as an attraction called the Biosphere.