A FICTION IN WOOD AND CONCRETE
Exploration of Material as a Protagonist in Architecture
Master Thesis project
Kristina Barniskyte
studio#5
supervisors:
Ulrika Karlsson Einar Rodhe
Stockholm 2016
The School of Architecture building, designed by Tham and Videgård Arkitekter, was finished in 2015. Round concrete cores were cast and pinewood cladding was nailed board by board on partition walls. The building was still empty and materials reigned inside.
Sand grains in concrete were anxiously bubbling, mixing with cement powder and water, while wood fibers were shaking nervously, trying to grow higher and poke through the
ceiling.
There was a granular logic underlying in concrete. The granules whirled and turned into round structures, attaching one to another, growing so big, that they rotated through the
walls, filling the rooms.
There was a fibrous logic concealed in pinewood. The fibers grew into elongated struc- tures, protruding the floors and extending through the walls from room to room. Formations of fibers turned into volumes, starting on one level, and continuing to the other. Fibers
determined the outline of the volumes and the openings in them, as well as their surface.
The fibrous logic began to transfer to concrete as well, defining the outline of solid concrete volumes, as well as voids in them and their surfaces. Structures and volumes interlaced, as
both were growing quickly, filling the building with new forms.
(the narrative)
SECTION DRAWING 1:5
a section through the narrative
and through the School of Architecture building
A FICTION IN WOOD AND CONCRETE
SECTION DRAWING EXCERPT
WOOD LOGICS
SECTION DRAWING EXCERPT
CONCRETE LOGICS
-- thesis question --
In architectural discourse, form is usually designed first, then a material is chosen to build the volume with.
In Aristotle‘s concept of hylomorphism, hyle (matter) is given shape by morph ē (form).
How can this relationship be looked at differently - can materials‘ surfaces at microscale
become generators of form and structure?
--the context--
The context – the School of Architecture building – is the driving force for the narrative:
the two dominant interior materials - wood and concrete – generate the new volumes and structures, that are brought back to the context after a series of translations – the new
forms interact with and transform the existing built structure.
In room A524, a full scale installation is built in wood and concrete, as a part of the narra- tive, depicted in the section drawing through the School of Architecture building.
room A524
190 LIT INFO - MONITOR
INFO - MONITOR
SCANNER
SCANNER E+D
RITSAL A501
+ 43.15
RITSAL A501
RITSAL A501
RITSAL A501
KOPIERING A502 A516
PAUSRUM/
PENTRY
PASSAG E A503
A504 MÖTESRU
M RWC A505 WC
A506 FÖRRUM HERR A507
WC A508 WC STÄD A509 A510
WC A511 WC A512 WC A513
FÖRRUM DAM A514 A515
MÖTESRUM MILJÖSTN.
A517 PASSAGE
A518
A521 MILJÖS TN.
TRAPPHUS A519
ELRUM A520
PASSAGE A522
DP RUM A523
MODELLRUM A525
A524
PASSAG E A526
KOPIERING A527 A528
MILJÖSTN.
PASSAGE A529
A534 GRUPPRU
M
DATA 3 A535
CPU A536
TRAPPHUS A530
EL A531
TR A1
TR A2
+ 43.15
+ 43.15
MILJÖSTN . A532
STÄD A533
MIL
JÖST
N.
HISS A2
HISS A1
SÄKER FLYK
TPLATS
KAFFEBRYGG KAFFEBRYGG
PLOTTER A1 GROVSOP
660 L
SKRIVARE
GROVS OP 660 L
PLOTTER A1
240 L SKRIVARE
240 L
E+N+LB
E+N+LB
E+N+LB E+N+LB
KAR TONG
370 L PAPPER
120 L
KARTONG 370 L PAPPER
120 L
M M M M M M M KYL
KYL
INSTALLATION IN THE ROOM
A FICTION IN WOOD AND CONCRETE
INSTALLATION VIEW THROUGH THE WINDOW
A FICTION IN WOOD AND CONCRETE
-- the full scale installation --
This installation, built in wood and concrete, explores the possibilities of matter to inform architecture: surface of materials is captured and translated into form and structure,
following the underlying material logic.
The built installation itself becomes an interface between fiction and reality: the narrative, revealed in the section drawing, empowers the design of the physical installation – and
the narrative becomes tangible through the built structure.
-- the fiction --
Jeffrey Kipnis writes that “[architecture] operates as a representational practice on a spectrum from realism to abstraction”, later in the text opening a discussion whether there can exist fiction in architecture
1. This architectural fiction abstracts the qualities of
materials, but the built installation brings the fiction back to the physical reality.
SURFACE DETAILS OF THE VOLUMES
CNC-MILLED
--the method--
Two material samples (size 4x4 cm) with a significant surface are prepared for capturing the qualities of materials: wood and concrete.
Both analogue and digital techniques are employed for translations: surface of broken material samples are 2D scanned and traced by hand, offsetted and laser-cut, put togeth-
er as models, turning them into tridimensional structures, following the underlying logic of the material. The same samples are also 3D scanned, transformed digitally, cutting them in layers, generating outlines, openings and voids, and CNC-milled, thus resulting in new
volumes.
The input for scanning is physical (the material samples of wood and concrete), but the information that is captured (the point cloud matrix and the traced lines) is digital and the
transformations that are carried out (cut, offset, extrude, mirror) are also classical digital operations. The transformed geometries are turned physical again by fabricating them as
solid volumes in wood and concrete, while the structures are fabricated to be physical, but not possesing any material qualities – black tridimensional lines.
The new structures and volumes inherit the different characters of the two materials:
elongated, fibrous geometries stem from wood and
round, whirling, granular geometries stem from concrete.
--material logics--
when transforming the scanned samples, a certain logic of materials is kept in mind:
fibrous logic of wood and
granular logic of concrete.
the electron micrograph scans illustrate and confirm this material logic.
source: http://www.ce.berkeley.edu/
electron micrograph scan of wood electron micrograph scan of concrete
source: Particle Atlas of World Trade Center Dust by Heather A. Lowers and Gregory P. Meeker
40 mm
40 mm
40 mm
40 mm
2D scanning + tracing >>> STRUCTURES --method--
tridimensional structures
in model tridimensional structures
in model
traced outlines traced outlines
2D scanned image 2D scanned image
450 mm
150 mm 20mm 20mm
--method--
3D scanning >>> VOLUMES
CNC milled model CNC milled model
transformed volume transformed volume
3D scanned mesh 3D scanned mesh
10 mm
450 mm 10 mm
400 mm
2D scan trace offset laser cut
build a physical model
3D scan cut offset extrude
mirror CNC-mill -- method --
STRUCTURES
-- method --
VOLUMES
--the qualities and effects--
These new forms represent the qualities of wood and concrete, but they are alienated by transformation. They have characteristics of both material and artificial, both figurative and abstract, similar to Chinese scholar rocks, that Herzog and de Meuron are inspired by: “yet it remains unknown to what extent the ´natural´ shapes of these stones have been manipulated, an artifi-
ciality enhanced by the wood or stone pedestals created for them“
2. Jeffrey Kipnis writes about the Miller House: “[The house is] transforming its owners and visitors alike into characters and transporting them away from a
strongly grounded sense of being in the here and now into a world of pre- tense and imagination”
3.
A fictive atmosphere, the “sense of transporting us elsewhere” is created in the room, as the scale of a material surface is now a scale of a volume or a
structure, cutting through the building. The new form is juxtaposed with a traditional architectural structure, the new volumes and structures cutting through the slabs and walls, thus creating new spaces inside and around
themselves.
What is closer to reality in the section drawing of this architectural fiction – the concrete slabs that are now cut through and fragmented, or the volumes
and structures, overtaking the building?
--references--
Adam Fure/SIFT studio ROCKS
“texture can transform from surface to massing”
Herzog and De Meuron SCHAULAGER
“the gravel material excavated on site was used to construct the walls, but it also determined the forms and surface structures of other parts
of the building, inside and outside.”
--references--
1
Jefrey Kipnis “Mulling the Miller”. “Et in suburbia ego: José Oubrerie's Miller House.” Columbus, Ohio: Wexner Center for the Arts, The Ohio State University, [2013].
2
Herzog & de Meuron “Natural History” edited by Philip Ursprung. Canadian Centre for Architecture, [2002].
3
Jefrey Kipnis “Mulling the Miller”. “Et in suburbia ego: José Oubrerie's Miller House.” Columbus, Ohio: Wexner Center for the Arts, The Ohio State University, [2013].
4