buildings

The Lungs of the Library

Submitted by admin on Fri, 2007-03-30 21:01.

from worldchanging.com by Regine Debatty



Foster and Partners' Philology Library in Berlin utilizes decades of research into the use of active and passive technologies for more energy-efficient buildings.

Wrapped in a structure reminiscent of Buckminster Fuller's geodesic domes, the building combines a concrete structural mass with a curved translucent skin that diffuses daylight and naturally ventilates the space. Stefan Behling (F&P eco-expert) compares the membrane to sitting with a white umbrella under a tree and watching leaves cast shadows to create a play of light and pattern: "In the library, if you are reading and look up from your book, you actually notice how clouds move over the building because the light changes on that surface. It's like a natural light projection screen."


The double skin and double floor serve as air duct and heat buffer. The space between the skins creates a "solar motor" that breathes when exterior flaps are opened or closed. The concrete structure acts as a passive thermal funnel. In lower temperatures the external flaps close. Using the chimney effect, fresh air is then drawn through an underground tunnel and up the thermal core of the building. In moderate temperatures the flaps open, allowing fresh and recirculated air to be cooled by the core.



For 60% of the year the library is ventilated by simply opening panels or using controlled fresh air drawn from below. The library consumes 35 percent less energy than a comparably sized building. Outside air is transmitted through underground tunnels. Depending on the weather, the building is either heated or cooled by water pipes embedded in the concrete slab floor. On extremely hot days cooling is provided by air-conditioning in the existing buildings. But "most of the year the building operates completely with its own natural ventilation," says Behling.



A structural yellow space frame, by MERO-TSK supports the membrane and helps create column-free space.



» Click here to read the entire article on 'Metropolis 1' and 2
» Click here to view more images

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DYnamic - MAXimum - tensION

Submitted by Joshua Arnow on Tue, 2005-12-06 17:51.

DYMAXION

DYnamic - MAXimum - tensION

At the heart of Buckminster Fuller's Dymaxion concept is the idea that rational action in a rational world demands the most efficient overall performance per unit of input. His Dymaxion structures, then are those that yield the greatest possible efficiency in terms of available technology.

In this section you will find resources and information about some of Fuller's most compelling applications of this set of criteria including the Dymaxion House, car, bathroom, etc.



Click on the image to view a small movie clip of Buckminster Fuller speaking about the Dymaxion concept

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Experimental Aqua Pod Could Bring Sustainable Fish Farming to Deep Ocean

Submitted by Joshua Arnow on Thu, 2005-11-10 12:36.



The University of New Hampshire ocean aquaculture program's new aquapod fish cage was submerged in the water at the state pier in Portsmouth on Wednesday September 21st 2005.
Due to the strength of the geodesic design and the use of vinyl coated galvanized steel mesh instead of synthetic twine netting, the AquaPod is suitable for growing fish in pristine offshore waters, which, due to rough conditions and storms are unsuitable for existing fish pen designs.

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