Host: Japan
Dates: 13/04/2025 - 13/10/2025
Theme: Designing a Future Society for Our Lives
Visitors: 29 Million+
Now that the dust has settled on Yumeshima Island and the crowds have returned home, it is the perfect time to look back at Expo 2025 Osaka, Kansai.
Held between April 13 and October 13, 2025, this was a historic event—not just for Japan, but for a global community eager to reconnect. As the first World Expo of the post-COVID-19 era, it carried a massive responsibility: to bring us together physically after years of digital distance. Looking back, it did exactly that, welcoming over 29 million visitors to explore the meaning of "life" with all five senses.
The Legacy of the Theme: "Designing Future Society for Our Lives"
For six months, Osaka became a global think-tank. The central question posed to visitors—“What is a happy life?”—resonated deeply in a world grappling with rapid AI evolution and social inequality.
The Expo successfully broke this massive concept down into three memorable subthemes:
Saving Lives: We saw groundbreaking demonstrations in infectious disease countermeasures and disaster readiness.
Empowering Lives: The robotics and remote education exhibits showed us how technology could extend our healthy lifespans and maximize human potential.
Connecting Lives: Perhaps the most poignant theme, emphasizing cross-cultural co-creation and data-driven communities.
The Eight Theme Weeks were a highlight, hosting over 400 programs that moved beyond simple discussion to accelerate actual solutions for global issues.
The Venue: Remembering the Grand Ring
The physical site on Yumeshima Island was a spectacle of engineering that utilized the sea and sky to perfection. The sheer scale of the 155-hectare site was impressive, but the architecture stole the show.
The iconic Grand Ring, designed by Sou Fujimoto, lived up to the hype. As the world's largest wooden architectural structure (Guinness World Record certified), it served as a symbol of "Unity in Diversity." Walking the 2-kilometre circumference on the "Sky Walk" offered a stunning 360-degree view of the pavilions below and the Seto Inland Sea beyond—a reminder that we all share "One Sky."
The site layout, with its decentralized plazas and "loop" flow, allowed visitors to wander through a "dispersed" world that felt organic rather than rigid.
Innovation & Myaku-Myaku
From the flying cars (eVTOLs) that buzzed in the skies to the fully cashless payment infrastructure, Expo 2025 truly served as a "People’s Living Lab." It gave us a realistic snapshot of a future society, not just as a concept, but as a functioning reality.
And, of course, there was Myaku-Myaku. The shape-shifting mascot, with its red "cell" ring and fluid blue body, became a beloved icon of the event. Its quirky design, symbolizing life passed down through generations, captured the imagination of millions and gave the Expo a distinct, unforgettable personality.
The Architects of Experience: A Spotlight on BeWunder
The success of the pavilions wasn't just about the exterior architecture; it was about the immersive storytelling inside. This is where partners like BeWunder truly shone.
Continuing their legacy from Shanghai 2010, BeWunder played a pivotal role as a turnkey solution partner for Expo 2025. They collaborated with top-tier architects to deliver national and thematic pavilions that merged high-tech visuals, sound, and light into seamless narratives.
Their work on pavilions for nations such as the USA, the Netherlands, and the Philippines (among others) transformed abstract ideas into emotional experiences. Looking back, it was this convergence of technology and storytelling that allowed visitors to truly "feel" the future, rather than just view it.
A Brighter Future
Expo 2025 Osaka, Kansai has concluded, but its impact remains. By bringing together 161 countries and regions, it sparked new conversations and human networks that will persist long after the pavilions are dismantled. It reminded us that despite our diverse values, we are united in our quest to design a sustainable, happy future for all life on Earth.