Half Forms
- material agency in spatial formations
Project Lead
Project Partners
Duration
01 September 2023–30 September 2027
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Assuming sustainability as a prerequisite for future building culture, the research project integrates separate approaches emerging in architectural discourse and related fields into a methodology for understanding the architectural potential of vulcanized fiber and developing a prototypical building system. Vulcanized fiber is a little-known, cellulose-based material, produced in sheets. Besides a good ecological balance, this material is durable, strong, and lightweight, offering significant potential for architectural application. Of special interest is the material’s natural deformation as a result of the drying process. It not only produces a distinct, natural form aesthetics but also a potentially improved structural performance as well as an ambiguous functionality and spatial quality. In this context, it is essential to examine the levels of control between form definition and a self-forming process. The project builds on developments in paper-based construction. It aims to investigate the aesthetic, functional, spatial, and constructive potential of plant-based vulcanized fiber, used as building components in architecture. Understanding the distinct characteristics of parts and the emerging implications for potential correlations is the basis for a bottom-up method of designing spatial structures. With this, natural-physical phenomena are combined with a hybrid working method of digital and analog techniques – to formulate a contemporary articulation of sustainable architecture. By following the dynamic properties of the distinct material to conceptualize architectural environments, this research aims to activate a new resource in architecture and expand the aesthetic, functional, and spatial norms of a sustainable building culture beyond utilitarianism.
Funding
Funding Category
PEEK program (AR 808-GBL)
Status
Running
Activity List
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- Schmidbaur, Karolin
- Gonzalo Vaíllo
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