The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones

Welsh designer Kieren Jones has devised a concept for harnessing the destructive power of erupting volcanoes by using lava flows to cast components for buildings.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Scale model of building elements

Having discovered that the current method for controlling lava from the world’s most volatile volcanoes is to redirect it using huge concrete barriers or cool it with sea water, Kieren Jones developed an alternative scenario in which the lava pours into casting beds excavated in the shape of structural building blocks.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Drawing showing the casting process – click for larger image

“Not only would these casting beds protect the population at the base of the volcanoes but they will also provide them with a constructive material in which to aid the recovery of a community post eruption,” Jones explained.

dezeen_The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones_4
Scale model of building elements

The designer believes that the accuracy with which volcanic activity can be predicted using sophisticated geological data could enable the casting beds to be positioned at the most effective points to capture the molten rock.

“Lava as a material is naturally light and thermally insulating and has the potential to be a strong building block,” said Jones.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Models of the 16 Decade Volcanoes

Models of 16 of the world’s most active and researched volcanoes, known as the Decade Volcanoes, were presented alongside drawings and scale models at an exhibition called Blanks in Between, curated by Workshop for Potential Design during this year’s London Design Festival.

The Volcano Project by Kieren Jones
Model of Mount Vesuvius

Here’s some more information from the designer:


The Volcano Project
By Kieren Jones

In 2013 there are 16 volcanoes that have been identified by the International Association of Volcanology and Chemistry of the Earth’s Interior of being of particular interest to study due to their history of destructive eruption and proximity to populated areas – these 16 volcanoes are known as the Decade Volcanoes.

Traditionally people have toyed with living at the base of volcanoes, as the ground is highly fertile fuelled by the ash and molten lava of past eruptions. Within the immense destruction of these often vast and bubbling mounds lies potential for a constructive future.

The United Nations are currently able to predict with relative accuracy when each Decade Volcano is likely to erupt and determine the direction in which the lava will flow. At present the method for mitigating the destruction of lava flows is to place large concrete blocks in the predicted path of the flowing lava and spraying it with sea water in order to try and cool this molten material.

Intrigued by the potential that these destructive happenings have and keen to find a way to harness this powerful flow into something constructive I have been investigating the potential of creating architectures from the flowing lava. Lava as a material is naturally light and thermally insulating and has the potential to be a strong building block. In fact the early Romans created some vast domed structures using this molten material.

Therefore instead of placing large concrete blocks in its path, I propose to create large casting beds into which the lava can flow, creating building blocks for future shelters. Not only would these casting beds protect the population at the base of the volcanoes but they will also provide them with a constructive material in which to aid the recovery of a community post eruption.

On the occasion of the Blanks in Between exhibition during the London Design Festival 2013, I presented a series of experiments and investigations into the potential that the Decade Volcanoes have to build future architectures providing constructive solutions out of natural destruction.

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by Kieren Jones
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Sakurajima Volcano Photography

Martin Rietze est un photographe spécialisé dans les clichés d’explosions volcaniques. Ce dernier a récemment réalisé de superbes images avec le volcan japonais de Sakurajima au cours d’une explosion impressionnante ayant eu lieu en février dernier. Des photographies à couper le souffle.

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Sakurajima Valcano1
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Competition: five copies of The Volcanobook to be won

The Volcanobook by Today Designers

Competition: speaking of volcanos (see our earlier story), we’ve teamed up with Today Designers in the Netherlands to give away five copies of their Volcanobook, featuring a cover printed in volcanic ash.

The Volcanobook by Today Designers

The book contains an essay on the eruption of the Eyjafjallajökull volcano in Iceland earlier this year, which resulted in a cloud of ash drifting into European airspace and grounding flights (see our story here), plus work by designers and illustrators on the theme of volcanoes.

The Volcanobook by Today Designers

To enter this competition email your name, age, gender, occupation, and delivery address and telephone number to competitions@dezeen.com with “Volcanobook” in the subject line. We won’t pass your information on to anyone else; we just want to know a little about our readers.

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The Volcanobook by Today Designers

Competition closes 9 November 2010. Five winners will be selected at random and notified by email. Winners’ names will be published in a future edition of our Dezeenmail newsletter and at the bottom of this page. Dezeen competitions are international and entries are accepted from readers in any country.

Subscribe to our newsletter, get our RSS feed or follow us on Twitter for details of future competitions.

The Volcanobook by Today Designers

Here are some more details from Today Designers:


I would like to inform you about The Volcanobook, a limited edition from Today Designers about the Icelandic volcano eruption, printed with volcano-ash (see attachments). Perhaps you can give this creative project some publicity on dezeen?

The idea started when the Eyjó-ashcloud hit Europe in april 2010 for several weeks. Everyone was complaining about it and we felt the urge to turn it into something possitive. With the help of internet we contacted Icelandic people who work or live close to the volcano area. We asked them to send a bag of volcano-ash to Holland so we could turn it into a workable ink for print. We used this ash to create a beautiful illustration on the book cover.

The Volcanobook by Today Designers

In The Volcanobook information and creation come together. A volcanologist researched this ash and wrote an article about it. Futher many designers and illustrators contribute with an inspirational artwork about Iceland or the volcano. The first 500 copies are in Dutch. We are working on a complete english edition as well.

The book presentation is on thursday the 14th of october in the Hot Ice gallery in Amsterdam. The mayor of the Iceland volcano area will present the first copy of the book. His name is: Ísólfur Gylfi Pálmason and he is the mayor of Hvolsvöllur, a little village counting 850 people.

The Other Volcano by Nelly Ben Hayoun

The Other Volcano by Nelly Ben Hayoun

French designer Nelly Ben Hayoun wants volunteers to live with a volcano in their lounge. 

The Other Volcano by Nelly Ben Hayoun

Called The Other Volcano, the project comprises a porcelain model of a volcano filled with explosives. Volunteers would plug the device into the mains and wait, knowing it could erupt at any time.

The Other Volcano by Nelly Ben Hayoun

The volcano is currently on show in the windows of the Wellcome Trust in London.

Ben Hayoun developed the project in collaboration with volcano expert Carina Fearnley and explosives were created by designer Austin Houldsworth (more about his work here).

It was first presented at Sunbury Workshops during the London Design Festival last month. See all our stories about the festival in our special category.

The information that follows is from Nelly Ben Hayoun:


THE OTHER VOLCANO by Nelly Ben Hayoun

Do you want your everyday life to go with a BANG? Is being in the centre of one of the nature biggest spectacle of smoke, dust and lava will blow you up?

How would you deal with a live volcano in the middle of your living room? Would you ignore it? Would you wrap it up?

Come and experience a first ceramic version of my new project “The other volcano” developed in collaboration with with Austin Houlsdworth (explosive designer) and Carina Fearnley (volcanologist) a 1000 times scale down revival of the Mount St Helen’s explosion in the heart of Shoreditch, East London. It will be part of ‘Sunbury workshops Open studios’ during London Design Week from 18th to 26th September.

“The Other Volcano” aims to build a series of semi-domesticated volcanoes, to be housed for a couple of weeks in the living spaces of volunteers. These designed supra-natural objects will be large, reaching almost to the ceiling, imposing, and extremely inconvenient – erupting dust and gloop into the living rooms of volunteers seemingly at random.

“In order to make myself recognized by the Other, I must risk my own life” said Sartre. The Other Volcano imagines a love-hate relationship, a ’sleeping giant’ in the corner of your domestic environment, with the power to provoke excitement with its rumblings, and also perhaps fear (if not for one’s life in this case, then at least for the soft furnishings of one’s clean and neat ‘living’ room). It is a project that domesticates the most violent of natural processes, addressing and reinterpreting different natures. With The Other Volcano I will try to question the domestication of nature for entertainment purposes.

How would you deal with a live volcano in the middle of your living room? Would you try to destroy it? Would you just disconnect it from the mains? Would you be more popular because you share your life with a volcano? Would you invite people to see it, and switch it on at the end of the meal to create a ‘surprising’ effect? How will you feel when you will climb on top of it?

The Other Volcano relates very much to my preoccupation with the juxtaposition of the epic with banal details, the extreme with domestic.


DezeenTV: The Other Volcano by Nelly Ben Hayoun

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