Papua New Guinea, Tonga, Western Samoa, Fiji, Vanuatu, Nauru, Solomon Islands and the Cook Islands banded together to create this picturesque pavilion. Fashioned for each culture's distinct architecture, this pavilion was in the shape of several individual homes/huts situated around a common meeting place.
Exhibits concentrated on the unique means of communication that the Polynesian people used inside and outside their individual communities. The culture was very much alive at the fair. So not to disturb the atmosphere for the guests, personal messages between the pavilion's guides were relayed on a traditional Slit gong drum in a Polynesian morris code. These were the same drums heard throughout the South Pacific islands centuries ago to convey long-distance messages.
Keeping with the transportation theme, outriggers and ocean going canoes were beached on the common. Masks, ancestral figures and sprint figures were also presented, depicting the moods and environments of the individual islands.