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Case Studies.

Case study # 1 “Prada Epicenter”, by Herzon & de Meuron

An unconventional and attractive feature in Tokyo’s prestigious Aoyama district, Herzon & de Meuron’s “Prada Epicenter” store is sheeted on a façade that works both as a decorative element and as the structural support of the entire construction’s six floors, where stairs and rooms morph seemingly out of the skin composed of diamond shaped units.

This skin, all around the building’s five façades, is also seen as an interactive element due the shape of the various windows around it, which vary from green and bluish colors to flat, convex and concave shapes, creating an illusion of movement along the building.

These diamond units are aggregated on one another to form a solid structural shell. This system is quite convenient since it creates resistance based on a single unit that can be repeated to the Nth power, plus it is also quite easy to keep track of the individual pieces during the fabrication process, unlike other similar buildings where each individual piece  is created around different dimensions.

Case study # 2 “Pavilion at Serpentine Gallery”, by Toyo Ito

Built to stand for just three months on the lawn of the Serpentine Gallery, at Hide Park in London, the Pavilion is a light construction made out aluminum plates. These plates are all of irregular patterns, being a sharp contrast to Herzog & de Meuron’s orderly grid. These irregular patterns form the basic, compact, structure of the pavilion.

The process can be seen as the extraction of material off a solid volume where a mathematically generated grid or map was overlaid, forming a pattern of patches. These patches then can be chosen to either remain within the solid or being extracted.

In the end what is obtained is a cubic body understood as being made out of an agglutination of different  shapes that together form the sole structural support. It does becomes a holistic object.

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„Breathing“ chair

A young  Taiwan designer Yu-Ying Wu is the author of the „Breathing“ chair, which came out as a result of an research in the field of digital fabrication. The pattern itself, although it looks randomly,   was carefully studied in order to fold and shrink under the pressure of the user. The weight of the user is transferred through the three layers of foam plastic and the goal was to bend the chair in a form of an armchair.

the chair and it’s designer in action :

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Sukkah City

The Sukkah is a temporary hut constructed for use during the week-long of Jewish holiday “Sukkot”.
The Sukkah (temporary hut) is a structure consisting of a roof made of organic material it should be walled structure covered with flora roof that one can see the sky throw it, such as tree branches or bamboo shoots.
The Sukkah City competition ask the participate to build a Kosher Sukka,
The meaning of that it should be build from organic/recycled material, that its skin should be its structure and of course that it would be transparency.
I choose two structures that I found them Interesting in their relation between structure, material and skin.
Gathering Dale Suttle, So Sugita, Ginna Nguyen
Michael Young, Kutan Ayata, John Morrison
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“architecture can be understood as a material body” – Andrew Kudless

Andrew Kudless takes advanced and inspiration from the biology structures, use his studies to develop new artificial biology structure.
His studies show that natural biology structure system are depending on the same forces that architecture structure has to deal with.
The skin is a structure by its self it should not be just a shell (as we know animals skin is a part of more complex system), therefore at his work the skin is more complex it became to be the structure and the body. skin, structure and the body are one.
More then that he explore the materials he uses study their behavior, forces, form… and that for taking an advantage of it and maximize the opportunities that the material has to offer us and find the best way to use it.

Andrew Kudless takes advanced and inspiration from the biology structures, use his studies to develop new artificial biology structure.  His studies show that natural biology structure system are depending on the same forces that architecture structure has to deal with.The skin is a structure by its self it should not be just a shell (as we know animals skin is a part of more complex system), therefore at his work the skin is more complex it became to be the structure and the body. skin, structure and the body are one.

More then that he explore the materials he uses study their behavior, forces, form… and that for taking an advantage of it and maximize the opportunities that the material has to offer us and find the best way to use it.

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GEOtube

Architecture firm Faulders Studio.GEOtube is a new concept for an urban sculptural tower proposed for Dubai that uses salt water to grow its own skin.

The building sucks up water from the source of the world’s saltiest ocean water, the Persian Gulf, through a 4.62 km underground pipeline, and then sprays it over a mesh facade. As the water evaporates and salt deposits aggregate over time, the tower’s appearance transforms from a transparent skin to a highly visible white solid plane. The result is a specialized habitat that provides an accessible surface to harvest salt. (images and information from http://www.welovebeautifulthings.com/)

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wooden dome pavilion

The  domed latticed pavilion is made up of several laminated strips of wood that have been bent in the middle and joined together, forming a diamond-shaped lattice-work. Adding moisture to the thin wooden elements resulted in them curving across the grain, thus increasing their structural capacity.The construction consisted of 46 groups of components while each of them consisted of 5 components: 36 identical groups of them are fabricated for the major structure, while 3 components in 6 groups of the total are fabricated differently for extreme curvature shift. Authors of the project are Architecture students Wing Yi Hui and Lap Ming Wong of the Oslo School of  Architecture and Design.

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