- Jul 20, 2016
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I am interested in new approaches to creating living spaces. Since I live in Texas, I know the value of shade and found this article very interesting.
Some of the ideas are artistic and appealing to the eye. However, some of them would not work here because the wasps would love them and build nests.
An interesting design was for mobile units that could be easily moved by a bicycle or camel. They were described as modern day Conestoga wagons, which played an important part in the expansion of the population west of the Mississippi River in the US in the 180os.
Another important design was for the construction of temporary walls in buildings damaged by earthquakes or bombs.
Yet today’s architects still do not employ fabric as widely as they could. “That fabric appears to be living — that it responds to the wind, that it creates an emotional connection with forces beyond a brick-and-mortar building — can be very inspiring. But that also makes it unpredictable,” reasons Seattle-based landscape architect Daniel Winterbottom. For all of tensile architecture’s allure, practitioners remain unsure of its code-compliant performance and, perhaps, in their own ability to incorporate its waving, billowing, pooling forms into a contemporary design vocabulary.
http://architizer.com/blog/future-of-shade-2016-winners/
Some of the ideas are artistic and appealing to the eye. However, some of them would not work here because the wasps would love them and build nests.
An interesting design was for mobile units that could be easily moved by a bicycle or camel. They were described as modern day Conestoga wagons, which played an important part in the expansion of the population west of the Mississippi River in the US in the 180os.
Another important design was for the construction of temporary walls in buildings damaged by earthquakes or bombs.
Yet today’s architects still do not employ fabric as widely as they could. “That fabric appears to be living — that it responds to the wind, that it creates an emotional connection with forces beyond a brick-and-mortar building — can be very inspiring. But that also makes it unpredictable,” reasons Seattle-based landscape architect Daniel Winterbottom. For all of tensile architecture’s allure, practitioners remain unsure of its code-compliant performance and, perhaps, in their own ability to incorporate its waving, billowing, pooling forms into a contemporary design vocabulary.
http://architizer.com/blog/future-of-shade-2016-winners/