Тёмный

Silk Pavilion I 

OXMAN
Подписаться 5 тыс.
Просмотров 9 тыс.
50% 1

The Silk Pavilion explores the relationship between digital and biological fabrication on product and architectural scales.
The primary structure was created of 26 polygonal panels made of silk threads laid down by a CNC (Computer-Numerically Controlled) machine. Inspired by the silkworm’s ability to generate a 3D cocoon out of a single multi-property silk thread (1km in length), the overall geometry of the pavilion was created using an algorithm that assigns a single continuous thread across patches providing various degrees of density.
Overall density variation was informed by the silkworm itself deployed as a biological “printer” in the creation of a secondary structure. A swarm of 6,500 silkworms was positioned at the bottom rim of the scaffold spinning flat non-woven silk patches as they locally reinforced the gaps across CNC-deposited silk fibers. Following their pupation stage the silkworms were removed. Resulting moths can produce 1.5 million eggs with the potential of constructing up to 250 additional pavilions.
Affected by spatial and environmental conditions including geometrical density as well as variation in natural light and heat, the silkworms were found to migrate to darker and denser areas. Desired light effects informed variations in material organization across the surface area of the structure. A season-specific sun path diagram mapping solar trajectories in space dictated the location, size and density of apertures within the structure in order to lock-in rays of natural light entering the pavilion from South and East elevations. The central oculus is located against the East elevation and may be used as a sun-clock.
Parallel basic research explored the use of silkworms as entities that can “compute” material organization based on external performance criteria. Specifically, we explored the formation of non-woven fiber structures generated by the silkworms as a computational schema for determining shape and material optimization of fiber-based surface structures.
More projects on our website: oxman.com/​
Follow us on Instagram: / oxmanofficial

Наука

Опубликовано:

 

5 май 2021

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 4   
@Melgna
@Melgna 2 года назад
This is so interesting and inspiring. The work you do is innovative and impressive. It would be a pleasure to take a look in your work 🥰
@onkarghadge6750
@onkarghadge6750 2 года назад
What did you give those silk worm to eat? Did they die out of hunger?
@anranli2112
@anranli2112 2 года назад
Hi Onkar! Thank you for your question. The silkworms are not starved to death, and we do not harm any silkworms in the process. We feed them mulberry leaves for about a month. Once they are ready to turn into moths, they begin to spin silk continuously without eating. In contrast to traditional sericulture, the silkworms in our project are able to turn into moths and lay eggs, thereby completing their life cycle. The eggs are then frozen, potentially for future Silk Pavilions.
@onkarghadge6750
@onkarghadge6750 2 года назад
@@anranli2112 Thanks for you reply. Good to know those creatures are not harassed but taken care of.
Далее
Silk Pavilion II
7:33
Просмотров 2,5 тыс.
NERI OXMAN - Bio Inspired Design
27:49
Просмотров 37 тыс.
Biomimicry: Hoax or Genius?
17:10
Просмотров 980 тыс.
You Should Know: Neri Oxman
3:26
Просмотров 20 тыс.
Glass II
5:27
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.
Neri Oxman: On Designing Form
20:43
Просмотров 150 тыс.
АЙФОН Г0ВН0
0:54
Просмотров 1,5 млн
КРУТОЙ ТЕЛЕФОН
0:16
Просмотров 6 млн
#samsung #retrophone #nostalgia #x100
0:14
Просмотров 12 млн