The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

London studio Loop.pH mimicked the molecular structures of carbon atoms to generate the form of this illuminated wiry dome (+ movie).

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

Named the SOL Dome, the structure was built using Archilace, a lightweight composite fibre developed by Loop.pH, and made up of carbon and fibreglass.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

The stiff woven fibres, which can be bent into almost any surface, have been shaped into circles to create a rigid structure based on the chemical and molecular bonds between carbon atoms.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

“It is an entirely new way of constructing architectural spaces based on textile principles,” creative director Rachel Wingfield told Dezeen.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

The studio created the installation as part of the Fall In… Art and Sol Festival in Michigan, USA, an annual art and science exhibition that this year is focussing on solar-powered art.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

Solar cells at the base of the dome store energy during the day and are then used to power an animated lighting sequence that is projected over the surface of the structure after dark.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

“The rotational breathing rhythm of the light is driven by an onsite CO2 sensor and is part of our studio’s ongoing research into creating environments that allow people to experience cycles of environmental data in public space,” said Wingfield.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

Wingfield also compares the structure to the experimental architecture of Buckminster Fuller.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

“It’s a further development on Buckminster Fuller’s work on geodesic domes where the solid rods are replaced by a single tubular membrane,” she added.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

Other projects by Loop.pH that use Archilace include an illuminated installation created for a festival in Germany and an umbrella-like canopy installed at the entrance to London’s Kensington PalaceSee more Loop.pH projects »

Photography is by Mathias Gmachl.

Here’s a project description:


The SOL Dome

The SOL Dome is a lightweight dome structure, 8 metres in diameter, 4 metre high and weighing only 40 kg. Its fabricated onsite over 3 days from thousands of individually woven circles of composite fibre. The structure is animated and part of a responsive lighting system, lit by a circular matrix of solar powered LED floodlights.

The rotational breathing rhythm of the light is driven by an onsite CO2 sensor and is part of our studio’s ongoing research into creating environments that allow people to experience cycles of environmental data in public space. The underlying geometry and construction technique of the dome is based on chemical, molecular bonds between carbon atoms. When each fibre is bent into a circle it is like charging a battery, creating a taut energetic structure.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

Our work at Loop.pH speculates on what the future of renewable energy could be and how it may alter both the urban and rural landscapes. We create environments that question what new behaviours, work forces and activity might emerge in an abundant renewable energy future.

Ultimately, we have a vision for an entirely new type of architecture that responds and adapts to its environment, similarly to a plant and its surrounding ecosystem. We dream of a living architecture that photosynthesises, moves and orientates in accordance to the sun. It is an architecture whereby the inhabitants can actively participate in its shape, form and function.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

The underlying geometry and construction technique is based on chemical, molecular bonds between carbon atoms. The taut structure of the SOL Dome embodies a kinetic energy whereby each fibre bent into a circle is like charging a battery. Large scale solar energy supply will only be possible if we can find an inexpensive storage mechanism. Transferring solar energy into chemical energy (chemical bonds) is one of the most promising approaches. The dome structure is an example of this type of stored energy.

Archilace is a pioneering and unique method to craft space and has been developed by Loop.pH over the past 10 years. It can simply be described as lace-making on an architectural scale and will be the principle technique behind the SOL Dome.

The SOL Dome by Loop.pH

Archilace encourages designers, architects and citizens to intervene and re-construct the built environment, promoting the idea that architecture is a process and in a state of constant transformation. Archilace combines a cutting edge parametric design process with a hands-on crafting technique. Weaving with composite fibres allows for virtually any imaginable surface to be created from a small number of parts. Where many individual fibres are weak when singular, great strength is created in unison as they interlink and cross one another. Recently discovered structures that were previously unbuildable can be fabricated by hand using a textile, curvilinear approach – breaking the rectilinear geometry that dominates our built environment.

Fall In…Art and Sol is a celebration of art, culture and science throughout Michigan’s Great Lakes Bay Region featuring the world’s first major solar art exhibition with International artists in October 2013.

Project: The SOL Dome by Loop.pH
Location: FirstMerit Bank Event Park, Saginaw, Great Lakes Bay Region, Michigan, USA
Date: 28 September – 31 October 2013
Client: Fall In… Art and Sol Festival

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"We’re bringing cutting-edge research into the public sphere" – Loop.pH

Mathias Gmachl of Loop.pH explains how the London design studio’s large-scale lighting installations help people relate to cutting-edge research in molecular biology in our next Designed in Hackney Day movie.

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

The studio aims to make science more accessible to people by creating environments in which they can experience the processes and structures first-hand, on an understandable scale. “We are trying to create artworks in the city that bring cutting-edge research in biology and in energy into the public sphere, into a park in the centre of the city, so people can actually relate to this research and get an understanding of what is about to happen to them.”

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

Since 2003, Gmachl and Rachel Wingfield’s Hackney-based studio loop.pH has combined science and design for projects ranging from community enhancement schemes in Hackney to installations at London’s Kensington Palace (above and below).

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

“The relationship with science is at the heart of what we do because we are very hungry researchers,” says Gmachl.

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

“We’ve developed illuminated, self-supporting animated architectural textiles using an old textile technique, lace making, that’s brought up to an architectural scale then combined with parametric design software to create some very ephemeral light installations,” he says.

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

Their research into metabolisms and energy flows began with a collaboration with British Nobel Prize-winning scientist John Walker, which led to large-scale interpretations of his molecular research and metabolic machines. “We took one of our textile techniques, based on taking a material and charging it up with energy, to create a molecular structure on a human scale,” he explains.

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

Collaboration is also important to Loop.pH’s work and Gmachl describes how creating artworks with residents on an east London estate to transform a notorious drug spot into a useable space was about “planting seeds” in the community. “It’s not about telling people what to do, it’s about trying to help find the opportunities and develop the skills so they can be practised,” he says.

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

“For a designer this is actually a difficult process, because designing is the thing that we consider ourselves to be best at and it’s the thing that we really want to do so to give up that level of control, to allow other people to design and to make the choices, is something that we have to learn to overcome.”

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

Based in Stoke Newington, the Loop.pH studio is just around the corner from Dezeen’s offices. Dezeen’s Designed in Hackney initiative was launched to highlight the best architecture and design made in the borough, which was one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices.

loop.pH at Designed in Hackney Day

Watch more movies from our Designed in Hackney Day or see more stories about design and architecture from Hackney. See all our stories about designs by Loop.pH »

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Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Illuminated installations inspired by the structures of microorganisms were created for the BUGA festival in Germany by Stoke Newington design studio Loop.pH.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Visitors could walk underneath the large, intricate structures that were made by weaving strong composite glass fibres.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Ground-level LED lights make the fibres appear to glow.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

The festival took place in Koblenz, Germany, in May this year under the curatorial theme of Art Forms in Nature.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

We have previously featured an illuminated canopy installed in the entrance to London’s Kensington Palace by Loop.pH as part of our Designed in Hackney showcase of creative talent in our local area.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

See all our Designed in Hackney stories here »


LICHTSTROEME 2012

LICHTSTROEME returned to Koblenz, Germany after a successful first edition in 2011 during the Federal Horticultural Show (“BUGA”).

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

The curatorial theme was “Art Forms in Nature” and the curators Bettina Pelz and Tom Groll invited artists who work at the interface between nature and arts in their works. 10 large-scale installations were built from the Electoral Palace along the Rhine banks to the Kaiser Wilhelm I Statue to the Fortress Ehrenbreitstein. All of the sculptures, projections and interventions made use of artificial light as one of their materials, so that they could be seen after dusk.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Design studio Loop.pH used their Archilace technique on a new site-specific installation for LICHTSTROEME 2012 in Koblenz, Germany inspired by the work of Ernst Haeckel, one of the first transdisciplinary thinkers who bridged the gap between art and the sciences.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Micro structures observed in the natural world were blown up to architectural proportions to create an ephemeral and luminous outdoor installation that visitors could walk through and experience on a human scale. The built structures are based on Radiolaria – the intricate skeletons of mineral deposits left behind by ocean microorganisms. Radiolaria was first illustrated and depicted by Haeckel in the work ‘Kunstformen der Natur’ between 1899 and 1904.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Archilace

Archilace is lace-making on an architectural scale with strong composite fibres and is a method to craft space and reflect on the materiality and fabrication processes within the architectural practice. Archilace combines a parametric design process with a hands-on crafting technique. Weaving composite textile structures allows for virtually any imaginable surface to be created from a small number of parts. Recently discovered structures that were previously unbuildable can be fabricated by hand using a textile, curvilinear approach – breaking the rectilinear geometry of our built environment with a non-Euclidean geometry made from curved structural elements tangentially joined.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Loop.pH is a London based art and design studio intervening at an urban scale to re-imagine life in the city.

The studio was founded in 2003 by Mathias Gmachl and Rachel Wingfield, to form a new creative practice that reaches beyond specialist boundaries, mediating between digital & biological media and facilitating participatory environments and urban crafts.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Loop.pH are internationally recognized for the design and fabrication of ephemeral textile architecture and living environments. They create urban utopias informed by ecologically based parametric design and principles of community engagement.

The studio operates on the convergence between biology, ecology, architecture and design. Through intervention based work they create living environments, synthesising living materials and digital tools, and proposing an emerging new role for designers and artists working at an urban scale.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

The studio explores the role of art and design in public space and society, and consults on creative strategies and future scoping for industry, start-ups and the public sector, with hospitals, schools and regeneration agencies all commissioning their work.

As a studio actively involved with education they lecture and deliver workshops internationally in a multidisciplinary context.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Their artwork can be found in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), NY, the V&A Museum, London and Lord Norman Fosters Private Art Collection, Geneva.

Lichtstroeme by Loop.pH

Designed in Hackney: Luminous Lace by Loop.pH

Luminous Lace by Loop.pH

Designed in Hackney: next up in our showcase of design talent from Olympic host borough Hackney is Stoke Newington studio Loop.pH, who have installed this umbrella-like canopy of illuminated lace at the entrance to London’s Kensington Palace.

Luminous Lace by Loop.pH

Inspired by the ceremonial lace that has been worn by the British royal family for centuries, the light installation is made from over 4 kilometres of electroluminescent wire and is decorated with Swarovski crystals.

Luminous Lace by Loop.pH

The structure will be on show to the public when the palace reopens next week, following a large restoration programme.

Luminous Lace by Loop.pH

Mathias Gmachl and Rachel Wingfield founded art and design studio Loop.pH in 2003 and have since designed a number of installations using lace-making techniques. We first featured them back in 2007, when they created a glowing structure that reacts to movement, then again in 2009 when the project was featured in an exhibition at the V&A museumSee all our stories about their work here.

Luminous Lace by Loop.pH

Their office is located on Stoke Newington Church Street, just down the road from Dezeen.

Key:

Blue = designers
Red = architects
Yellow = brands

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Designed in Hackney is a Dezeen initiative to showcase world-class architecture and design created in the borough, which is one of the five host boroughs for the London 2012 Olympic Games as well as being home to Dezeen’s offices. We’ll publish buildings, interiors and objects that have been designed in Hackney each day until the games this summer.

More information and details of how to get involved can be found at www.designedinhackney.com.