Refabricating architecture published in 2004 reaffirmed prefabrication’s
appeal for architects and shared a vision for the reorganization of building
culture. Manufacturing, long thought to be unconnected from architectural
design, could now be part of a holistic design to construction process with the
architect firmly positioned at its core. Contemporary computerized tools triggered
this revolution. Already more than a decade later, cad tools are further streamlining
with cam tools giving the architect unprecedented access to the factory floor.
Kieran and Timberlake's contemporary manifest is perhaps as important to
prefabricated architecture as Gropius’ work was in the early twentieth century.
Gropius argued first for architecture made from manufactured components
leveraged into many design options. In the same way Kieran and Timberlake’s
work first on the Loblolly House in 2006 and then in their prototype design for
the Cellophane House inspired a new generation of architects to rethink the factory
production of houses.
Cellophane house is one of five prototypes built to be included in
MOMA’s rekindling of prefabrication exhibit entitled Home delivery:
fabricating the modern dwelling (2008). The five prototypes reintroduced
prefab exploration and continued the lasting conceptualization of the exhibit
house prototype as a necessary component for architecture’s advancement.
The Cellophane House, a derivative of the canonical modern glasshouse
proposed a five storey scaled-up «Le Corbusier’s Citrohan House» like prism
assembled from a kit of industrialized parts. An off the shelf aluminum post
and beam frame, manufactured «chunks» or modular building
sub-assemblies such as kitchens and baths and variable skins or cladding are
the three basic elements of this plug and play building syntax. The system is cleverly
designed to facilitate both assembly and disassembly, to challenge traditional
construction and propose flexible and modular data informed parts that can be employed
for many different designs.
Beyond the architects’ exploration of Smartwrap (a trademarked
structural multi-functional bioclimatic adaptable cladding capable of reacting
to changing environmental conditions), the real innovation is the
systems’ horizontal and vertical scalability. A statement on mass
customization, the modular structure can be modulated for different site
topographies, orientations and any functional layout. Furthermore, the kit
can accommodate a variety of materials to suit different needs, tastes, and
budgets.
Cellophane House layers and components |
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