agis maurice
Transcription
agis maurice
CONTENTS Synopsis 2 Evolving architecture 7 Industrial innovation 11 Methods of mobility 17 Ideas for ideals 20 Pressures on portability 24 The perils of politics 27 Solutions to sustainability 33 Travelling through Technology 42 Moving with the military 46 The art of mobility 50 Conclusion 61 Notes 63 Bibliography 66 1 2 Robin Halford – M09999 Dissertation - 14/01/02 Architecture, Mobility and Evolution Towards a mobile future? needed (Fig. 3 & 4). Synopsis Looking back at how architecture has served our ancestors will reveal that The subject of mobile architecture is human beings find mobility in architec- vast. The title could include anything ture both desirable and necessary, from artistic and social experimenta- suggesting that the concept of mobil- tion, such as the Homeless Vehicle ity is not just about buildings that move Project by David Lurie and Krysztof but about deep seated social instincts, Wodiczko, to the technically governed such as warring over territory or mov- practicalities of a North Sea oilrig (Fig. ing to new pastures, that are a natu- 1 & 2). Later nomadic civilizations rally occurring part of humanity. With which brought with them temporary war comes the need to move troops structures, such as the Yurts of the and equipment quickly. A portable Mongols, are far removed from feats bridge might be needed and troops of engineering like the Eden Project need to be sheltered with lightweight in Cornwall; the latter, although not structures they can carry with them. specifically mobile, possessing the Once the battle is finished refugees potential to be easily de-mounted if will need to be provided for and sheltered and the injured troops requiring temporary hospitals and so on. Establishing what mobile architecture is will involve looking at its relationship to vehicles and other closely related fields such as modular and tension structures. Apicella Associates’ Hong Kong Tourist Association structure transforms a standard truck into an inFig 1. Homeless Vehicle Project by David Lurie and Krysztof Wodiczko stant pavilion in one day (Fig. 5). It is 3 Fig. 2 Floating hotel for North Sea oil fields. difficult to distinguish between vehicle How much mobile architecture be- or vessel and mobile architecture. longs to the school of ‘form follows Many ships possess all the services function’ is closely linked with the pre- and structures of a land building and vious idea. There is often a division are designed by naval architects. Our between the architect and engineer. innate love of mobility is also evident It seems that many architects don’t in the number of caravans on our feel it necessary to become thor- roads. oughly familiar with the complicated engineering and material science involved in mobile architecture, while many engineers might not unleash the potential of their expertise by ignoring the psychological and social needs of the public. I will investigate the strengths and weaknesses of a marriage between architecture and the scientific world. Fig. 3 Components of a Mongolian Yurt or Ger. 4 Fig 4. Constuction of the Eden Project, Cornwall. Fig. 5 Hong Kong Tourist Association Pavilion, Apicella Associates. 5 It follows that cross-referencing be- technology if they are to continue fash- tween different technologies could be ioning our environment, especially in essential to the program of mobile the case of mobile architecture. Al- architecture. The discovery of new though I will suggest that architects materials, such as duraluminium in should play just as much of a role in airship building and then aircraft, be- the concept of mobility as engineers ing transferred to the building trade or scientist, I will make a case that because of its strong lightweight na- merging architect and scientist into ture is an example. Although this one and the same is a necessity for seems logical, communication that mobile architecture. has naturally occurred through history. can become a complicated procedure. My main point is that mobile architecture is a living entity that can only flourish when not just architect and engineer work together but when all sides of the technological and artistic areas share information and all remain receptive to outside influence. For example, Michael Webb’s Suitaloon, “The space suit that could be identified as a minimal house”18, would not be constructed by an architect and civil engineer like a normal building. As our society becomes more reliant on computer technology so its expectation of what is possible broadens. People are getting used to seeing amazing technology that only exists as a concept being apparently realised through films. Architects must keep abreast of the most advanced 6 ———————————————— Architecture, Mobility and Evolution Towards a mobile future? After a hard week at the office in a cold, miserable English winter wouldn’t it be refreshing to fall asleep in your own bed and wake up the next morning by the warm sands of a blue lagoon? Impossible? Fig. 6 Tropical lagoon in Fiji. Evolving architecture “A challenger for the title of oldest hu- pentagons which are the remnants of man ancestor has emerged from two huts (Fig. 7). “it is the first good Ethiopia”1 about 5.8 million years old. evidence from 500, 000 years ago of According to Claire Ainsworth “The a hut structure”.2 From that point it dawn of humankind occurred 5 to 7 took a good 494 000 years, give or million years ago”.1 Another recent take a 100 000, for the first civilisations discovery in Chichibu, Japan un- to evolve in Mesopotamia where earthed the oldest structure yet, 10 “Some of the first cities were estab- shallow holes, forming two irregular lished, a writing was developed, em- 7 opment. Why should the future of architecture be static? The static buildings that dominate Fig. 7 Previous oldest hut found in France, Terra Amata about 200,000 - 400,000 years old. the architecture of civilisation, which includes our present day office blocks and houses, accounts for just over 1% of the evolu- pires were created and monumental tion of architecture, again using the buildings were constructed”.3 So ar- Chichibu hut as a base point. So what chitecture, from the Chichibu hut to the did humankind do for the other 99% present day, has been around for just of architectural evolution? The 7% of the evolution of mankind. The Chichibu hut was built by our ances- speed of architectural evolution, since tor Homo Erectus (Fig. 8). “They were then, demonstrates just how ephem- hunter-gatherers and had to move eral the subject is and warns us to where the resources were. Who keep an open mind about its devel- knows whether this was a shelter they Fig. 8 From left to right; Homo Erectus, Neanderthal Man and Homo Sapiens Sapiens. 8 Fig. 9 Maurice Agis’s Dream Space. stayed in for one week, or one month”, Neolithic Age, “characterised by the 2 said Chris Stringer, head of human development of the earliest settled origins group at London’s Natural His- agricultural communities” 6 around tory Museum. Although this hut may 9000 B.C., we have a period in the or may not have been mobile we know region of 489 000 years or 89% of it was the product of a mobile society architecture’s existence, where mobile but this is literally just the beginning. architecture was the norm to suit the “The most primitive people known to- hunter gatherer life style. So would it day are nomadic as were Stone Age be unreasonable to suggest that mo- people all over the world”.4 If the, bility and mobile architecture are hunter-gatherer life style meant mov- deeply seated in the human psyche? ing from place to place the architecture had to follow suit as Robert In today’s world one can see mobile Kronenburg suggests; “moving build- architecture ranging from the most ings are amongst the earliest artifacts functional realms of industry, for ex- created by man”.5 As the Stone Age ample the oilrig (Fig. 2), on one ex- lasted from the Early Paleolithic Age, treme, to creations of the artistic imagi- about 3,500,000 years ago, to the nation, such as Maurice Agis’s Dream 9 Space 7, on the other (Fig. 9). ture simply moved into the factories and mills. Although this technology It is evident that the ability to develop forced us to remain stationary it was structures goes hand in hand with the beginning to reflect our desire to be ability to develop technology. “We mobile. By 1808 Richard Trevithick know that Homo Erectus used stone had built the first steam powered car- tools”2 and it follows that the better riage (Fig. 10) and by 1829 people your technology, the more efficient you were able to travel long distances at can be at your job, whether that is great speed in relative comfort with farming or building. Our early ances- Stephenson’s Locomotive (Fig. 11). tors were not able to farm the land to This was a key step in the way soci- produce food so the majority of the ety viewed mobility. Traveling at higher population would have taken respon- speeds than those possible in previ- sibility for finding enough to sustain ous eras, these enormous and ornate themselves. This left little time to de- engines are still impressive today.9 velop technology. As soon as our ancestors possessed the tools and know how to farm they stopped moving around but much of the population would still have been involved in farming. It is only recently that so few farmers can produce more than enough food for the population. Less than 200 years ago over 90% of the population was involved in food production whereas today it is only 3%, leaving the majority free to develop other fields of human endeavour, such as cars and computer technology. By the time the industrial revolution8 started in 1751, changes to the agricultural system had already increased the efficiency of farming. Many of those who worked the land and then lost their jobs to the mechanisation of agricul- 10 Fig. 10 The first steam powered locomotive by Trevithick created for Coalbrookdale ironworks. Despite his numerous innovations, Trevithick, died unrecognised and in poverty. Fig. 11 Stephenson and his Locomotive. Fig. 12 The first completely iron bridge over the River Severn at Coalbrookdale built by Abraham Darby III in 1779. Industrial innovation The 1750’s saw great advances in technology, one of the most impor- now easier due to the refinement of tant being iron manufacture. Many the moulding process. This some- of the advances were pioneered at times caused anachronistic building Iron Bridge where, in 1779, the first styles, with neo-classical features ap- completely iron bridge (Fig. 12) was pearing on train station columns or constructed by Abraham Darby III Gothic a features appearing in train over staions (Fig. 13). the River Severn at Coalbrookdale, Shropshire. Mass production and construction was Iron lent itself to engineering work and Fig. 13 Paddington Station, London with various gothic and neo-classical elements. 11 by 1860 spans of 200-300 ft. were It was neither an engineer nor an ar- regularly being achieved where ma- chitect who realised the potential for sonry and wood had rarely managed a de-mountable building made out of 80 ft. Now engineers became domi- iron and glass. Joseph Paxton (1801- nant in the world of architecture de- 65) came from an ordinary family signing with new materials, exposing background but ran away from home and shaping them in accordance with and ended up working as a garden function rather than whim or historical boy at Battlesdon Park. Eventually he compromise. Isambard Kingdom became head gardener at Chatsworth Brunel (1806-59) and Thomas Telford where he developed an interest in (1757-1834) were prolific builders of greenhouse design. Although he was bridges and aqueducts. In 1815 interested in steel and iron he pre- Telford built the Menai Bridge linking ferred to use wood in his construc- Anglesea to Wales (Fig. 14) and by tions. Paxton was concerned with the 1864 Brunel had built the famous details in his designs. He preferred Clifton suspension bridge, spanning sun rays to hit the glass at right angles the Avon Gorge (Fig. 15). The other where possible and invented an inno- notable advance was in glass produc- vative internal guttering system, to tion. New techniques for making glass catch condensation, which became enabled clearer, stronger glass than known as Paxton Guttering. He de- had been available before.10 Fig. 14 Menai suspension bridge by Thomas Telford. 12 Fig. 15 The Clifton suspension bridge I. K. Brunel. signed The Great Conservatory in be erected quickly. The whole build- 1836 which incorporated a boiler, a ing was constructed in 17 weeks and gallery and was big enough to let a using 900,000 sq. ft. of glass, 3,300 carriage pass through. Unfortunately iron columns and 32 miles of gutter- the painting of the wood frame proved ing. The massive solar gains were too costly to maintain. It was from this experience that Paxton developed the first major de-mountable structure of its kind. Designed to hold the great exhibition of 1851, the iron and glass structure of the Crystal Palace (Fig. 16a & b) covered an area of 69,892 sq. m which was about four times the size of St. Peters in Rome (Fig. 17) and comparable to the Millennium Dome’s 80, 500 sq. m. The structure consisted of 143 standardised parts which were prefabricated and could Fig.16a Inside Paxton’s Crystal Palace. 13 Fig. 16b Paxton’s Crystal Palace built for the great exhibition of 1851. Fig.17 St. Peter’s in Rome. 14 dealt with by stretching unbleached new materials and methods can pro- calico over the glass which reduced duce many characteristics of mobile the glare. An army of 500 men painted architecture including efficiency, good the structure and a glazing wagon, value and the potential for relocation. using the beams as rails, could glaze This architecture may have sparked two girders every sixteen seconds. an interest in mobile structures. The building was only moved once Paxton was knighted for his contribu- from Hyde Park to Sydenham Hill, tion and later went on to construct the against Paxton’s will, where it, sadly, Palm Houses at Kew (Fig. 18). Paxton burnt down in 1936.11 had been building large conservatories for the Duke of Devonshire which The industrial revolution has many must have been instrumental in gain- parallels with our present digital revo- ing him the recognition of Prince Albert lution including the availability of new and winning the project from a politi- materials and technology. Crystal cal stand point. The fact that it was a Palace shows how a balance between gardener who made this seminal leap technology and architecture can is not a good reflection on the open achieve a progressive, practical and mindedness of the architectural pro- inspiring structure. An awareness of fession at that time. Fig. 18 Paxton’s Palm Houses at Kew. 15 The technology that forced us to work in the fields and then the factories is, once again, developing sufficiently to realise our in-built need and love for mobility. The progression has already taken us beyond the ability to travel from A to B quickly and into a world where banks, such as Apicella associates’ Mobile TSB (Fig. 19), can travel as fast as a car and where space stations, like Mir (Fig. 20), are a reality. With our technology forever decreasing in size and increasing in power could it be that our future is on the move? 16 Above : Fig. 19 Mobile TSB Bank and hospitality facility in vehicle form, Apicella Associates. Below : Fig. 20 (main picture) The Mir space station, now history, having plunged to earth in March 2001 and its successor the International Space Station (top right). Methods of mobility The official definitions of architecture as rich and powerful or demonstrat- found in dictionaries are usually open ing its function like a temple, the term ended and the scope of architecture architecture starts to apply to the so- is as difficult to clarify as any art, so cial side of a culture as well as the the reasons for including and exclud- necessary side. This supports the ing certain structures as mobile archi- concept of architecture as servant to tecture must be justified. Early hu- humanity. Architecture must fulfill the mans were primarily concerned with necessary, by sheltering and protect- their own survival as we are today. ing, as well as catering for our social Their ability to design tools from the instincts, for instance, praying or surrounding environment enhanced watching football. Although there are their chances of staying alive, whether other types of architecture, such as the tool was a spear to kill an animal monuments, the one that is most use- or a sharpened flint to fashion wood ful to us is that which shelters and (Fig. 21). serves people directly. This would in- A hut could be looked at as a tool for clude vehicles as architecture but a division does exist between the two. A vehicle separates itself because its primary function is moving something from one place to another. Although Fig. 21 Prehistoric artefacts including flint scrapers, a flint awl found in Thriplow sheltering from the elements but “once this function has been fulfilled the roll of architecture then serves other purposes”12 When the structures’ initial roll of shelter starts to take on other Fig. 22 A bicycle is not architecture! meanings, like representing its owner 17 Fig. 23 A Boeing 747 must protect its passengers in flight. a bicycle (Fig. 22) serves humanity its a traditional gypsy caravan (Fig. 24) primary objective is to travel and not is a permanent shelter as is a battle shelter as is the case with a car where ship to many sailors (Fig. 25). Thus shelter is of secondary importance be- we arrive at a grey area, somewhere hind accommodating the engine and in-between architecture and vehicle, fitting on the road. However, some ve- that can be described as mobile ar- hicles’ ability to shelter is just as im- chitecture. Also in this grey area are portant as their ability to travel, for a cross breed of vehicle and architec- example, a Boeing 747 (Fig. 23). If it ture that cannot be both at the same didn’t shelter its passengers they time but posses the ability to inter- would die in transit. In a different way change. A good example is the Hong Fig. 24 A gipsy caravan from Wind in the Willows, as depicted by Justin Todd. 18 Kong Tourist Pavilion13 (Fig. 5) by have to undergo a change to become Apicella Associates which is based mobile, so could be thought of as de- around two standard lorries. These mountable-mobile architecture. Fig. 25 A U.S. Battleship is home to its crew. 19 Ideas for Ideals Mobile architecture has been around is not the ideal environment for work- since the beginning, from the nomadic ing or resting. Archigram have come shelter to the gypsy caravan and our close to an ideal with their Instant City present state of technology is allow- (Fig. 26). The idea saw the ‘slow mov- ing it to flourish. So the ideal form of ing’14 countryside as producing young mobile architecture might be able to people who “have a suspicion that travel freely for long distances whilst they are missing out on things that simultaneously providing an environ- could broaden their horizons”.14 They ment for work, rest and play. If you flew suggest that the ‘metropolis’ 14 is on an aeroplane today you could have where these desires can be met but the ability to make a phone call to any- the ‘physical nature’14 of the metropo- where in the world, play video games, lis is such that it provokes a, presum- watch films and even send e-mails to ably detrimental, ‘reaction’.14 The your office from your seat. This is an main theme is: “if only we could enjoy impressive step on the road to an ideal it [the metropolis] but stay where we mobile architecture but an aeroplane are”.14 The solution to the problem Fig. 26 Archigram’s Instant City in all its glory. 20 was an Instant City that could assemble overnight on the countryside and provide “a network of information - education - entertainment”.14 Although posing important questions about the social uses of mobile architecture in society, the collapsible trusses and ‘Audio-Visual Juke Box’s15, are not as important to an ideal mobile architecture as their means of deployment. Initially they proposed to carry it in twenty vehicles but then became “interested in the versatility of the airship... (a great and silent bringer of the whole conglomeration)” (Fig. 27).16 Fig. 27 Stages in Archigram’s Instant City using an airship for deployment. 21 Fig. 28 The R100. airship built by the Airship Guarantee Company could lift 79 tonnes. Haven’t they got a good point? The air- helped to give airship travel a bad ship is versatile because it can float name. The airship evolved as a war effortlessly in the universal medium of machine and vehicle and was soon air unlike a ship which is restrained to overtaken by the development of pow- an area of water or a plane that must ered flight which proved a more prac- use a runway. An airship does not tical machine for fighting and travel- need an engine to maintain lift as it is ling. Admittedly, the airship, in its lighter than air, has the potential to lift present form, remains a vehicle but and carry heavy loads (the R100, Fig. couldn’t it form part of the ideal? The 28, had a payload of 79 tonnes)17 and answer lies within our fundamental can accommodate a large space for urge to travel. If, idealistically, we want living, working, etc. Unfortunately the to go home to bed after a hard week numerous explosions that occurred, at the office and wake up to the warm such as the famous Hindenburg (Fig. sand of a tropical lagoon, mobile ar- 29) and R101 (Fig. 30) disasters, have chitects must think laterally to gain their inspiration. 22 Fig. 29 The Hindenburg explodes in May 1937 after an Atlantic crossing. Fig. 30 The ill-fated R101. moored at Cardington before its final journey. 23 Pressures on portability Archigram’s Plug-in (FIg. 31), Walk- plex. In reality many of Archigram’s ing (Fig. 32) and Instant Cities (Fig. schemes, like the Suitaloon, required 26) begin to address some of mobile more sophisticated technology than architecture’s concerns such as its was available, even when man first effect on community, aesthetic form landed on the moon in 1969, and thus and function. Michael Webb’s they still remain naive with technologi- suitaloon “the building that could be cal detail. How much Archigram’s identified as a minimal house”18 (Fig. structures were influenced by the 33) would require more advanced space race of the late1960’s is a mat- technology than a space suit to per- ter of opinion but it can hardly be de- form its amorphous functions and to nied that they bear a resemblance to debate what its form is and whether it the sophisticated space architecture follows its numerous functions is ei- of today. ther incredibly simple or rather com- Fig. 31 Archigram’s Plug-in City. 24 Fig. 32 Archigram’s Walking City. Technology is just one of many fac- this at the moment by showing us a tors influencing whether or not we can world through the television and by be mobile. Issues such as the nation giving us the ability to live from the state, culture, the desire of some Internet but even if future technology people to be static, legal systems, re- can tap into our brains and stimulate ligion, planning, energy use, crime and us into a true virtual reality, as in the population are some of the others. film The Matrix, will our underlying Planning, legal systems, money and mobile instincts still prevail? It follows population, have always tended to that those who are less inclined to be adapt around the numerous techno- mobile might prefer a world where you logical shifts we have had in the past can travel without ever moving. What- and there is no reason why that should ever the case the future looks set to change. The greatest threat to a mo- be governed by advanced technology bile future, might be, an ephemeral and a mobile architecture, that feeds future where technology enables to- off this technology, could well prevail. tal virtual reality. To an extent it does 25 Fig. 33 Michael Webb’s Suitaloon from the Archigram group Fig. 34 Richard Roger’s Millenium Dome - given a bad name by political blunders. 26 The perils of politics An aspiring new mobile technology The first labour government came to should be aware of political interven- power on 21 January 1924 inheriting tion. The humiliated Millennium Dome the principle of a, six airship strong, (Fig. 34) probably owes many of its passenger and mail service to India. problems to political interference as To deal with the building of these craft does the New Wembley Stadium (Fig. the Airship Guarantee Company, a 35) which can’t seem to get its act to- subsidiary of Vickers, had been set up gether and what about Rail-Trak? during the previous government. The Perhaps the most relevant examples new of political interference are those nu- MacDonald, chose Brigadier-General merous blunders that destroyed our C.B. Thomson, a retired army officer, airship industry. These craft that have as his Secretary of State for Air. so much potential to get an ideal mo- Thomson had offered himself three bile architecture off the ground and times for election into the House of travelling free have been thwarted to Commons and been rejected. Now he no small extent by political interfer- was given a barony and called him- ence. self Lord Thomson of Cardington. The Prime Minister, Ramsey Fig. 35 The New Wembley Stadium? - held up by political interference. 27 new government decided that they England at that time. Unfortunately for would build only two airships to prove the government most of these experts the feasibility of a service to and from were already in highly paid private India. The Air Ministry was to research sector jobs putting the government at and build a 5,000,000-cubic-ft. craft on a disadvantage. The R.101 (Fig. 36 a budget of £1,000,000 and establish & 30) was to be built in the Cardington bases in Egypt and India. The Airship hangers that had to be re-opened and Guarantee Company was to build a enlarged especially for the job (Fig. second ship on a budget of £350,000. 37). The rival Airship Guarantee Com- The Air Ministry intended their ship to pany began work on the R.100 (Fig. be used for military purposes after it 38a,b & 28) with a team headed by had proved the reliability of the India Barnes Wallis, the eminent engineer service leaving the Airship Guarantee best know for the bouncing bomb (Fig. Company with the commercial ship. 39). The inevitable media attention to It was an experiment by the govern- the work at Cardington was quick to ment, or more a demonstration, to disclose any errors, something that show how much better public enter- Wallis didn’t have to worry about. prise was than private enterprise. Both companies would be in competition for The R101. was plagued with problems the few airship experts who existed in from the beginning. Estimates of her Fig. 36 The spacious promonade deck of the R101. airship. 28 Fig. 37 The enormous Cardington airship hangers reopened to build the R101. 29 lift suggested that she would not cope with the hundred passengers and two hundred troops specified and thus her specifications were changed to accommodate only 50 passengers and ten tons of mail. The delay that this would cause to completion was substantial. The R101’s specified lift was 75 tons but when completed, estimated to be only 35 tons. The amount Fig. 38a A drawing of the saloon in the R100. Fig. 38b A photograph of the lounge deck on the R100. of gas she would have to shed on a long journey meant that India would not be possible and she would barely be able to carry her own weight in fuel half that distance. As a result removal of her reefing girders, to allow her gas bags a greater capacity, was recommended along with cutting her in half Fig. 39 Barnes Wallis was the cheif designer of the R100. 30 and inserting another segment so that her capacity and thus her lift could be further increased. All of this work to India. It exceeded its contract lift of would only add another 6 tons lift over- sixty four tons by 15 tons and trav- all. Lord Cardington insisted that her elled 11 mph faster than its 81mph maiden flight to India must take place specification. A fast, stable and reli- before the end of September 1930 able ship her only problems were and that all of this complicated work slight wrinkling on her envelop at must be carried out beforehand. De- speeds exceeding seventy mph and spite finding over 100 holes in one of a water getting through her envelope her gas bags they were patched up and wetting the gas bags. While the and the major work continued with modifications were taking place to the only nine weeks to meet her politically R101. the R100. made various flights pressured deadline. Her trial flights to Montreal across the Atlantic from showed her to be substandard. She Ireland. On one flight she made an could not complete her speed test average speed of 100 mph by taking because her engines cut out although advantage of favourable air currents. she did manage 63 mph on one occasion. She could not use all of her The pressure on the R101. to fly to engines at the same time because India caused various inspection pro- they created unacceptable vibrations cedures to be shammed and tests and she managed only 31 hours of a and flight trials were sacrificed to meet 48 hour endurance test. Whilst Lord Cardington’s deadline. The ship moored to a mast in Cardington a vio- was unsafe, a fact acknowledged by lent storm caused her to roll dramati- its crew many of whom took out spe- cally and the coxswain reported that cial life insurances. The craft left every roll caused her gas valves to Cardington in bad weather on the open and vent as well as chafing the evening of 4 October, 1930. Lord delicate hydrogen filled gas bags Cardington was among the 12 pas- against the structure. To remedy this sengers and insisted on bringing a her valves were adjusted and some case of champagne and some orna- of the structure was padded. mental carpets as luggage. There were also 42 crew members and 25 Meanwhile the R100. was told by the tons of heavy oil to power the engines. government it could not fly to India and The ship could not rise from the mast must fly to Canada instead because without shedding four tons of ballast. they wanted their ship to be the first Rolling and Pitching, the ship made 31 slow headway flying as low as 1000 tion, the government was forced to buy ft. at times. By 2am the R101. , soaked the very successful R.100 in accor- and weighed down with rain water, dance with their contract only to rip her reached Beauvais. Shortly after, she to pieces, tear her engines and gas dived to the ground and smashed into bags out and literally steam roller her a field. In the same instant she was remains flat into a pit in an apparent fit consumed by flame killing all but 8 of of pique.19 her 54 passengers and crew (Fig. 40). In the light of recent events it would No one really knows what the exact appear that politicians have learnt little cause of the crash was. It is thought of the difficulties of becoming involved that the stormy weather caused her in technologically advanced projects to roll excessively and that she vented and it is likely that they will cause many too much gas although if this is the unnecessary set backs along the road case it is amazing that the R.101. got to an ideal mobile architecture. so far. The disaster was an unnecessary tragedy which also sealed the R.100’s fate. After some procrastina- Fig. 40 The R101 at Beauvais. The result of political interference? 32 Fig. 41 A massive Merseyside power station seen from Runcorn. Solutions to sustainability Today energy is created for us on the moment urge us to become more mass with huge power stations (Fig. self sufficient by producing our own 41) catering for our electrical creature energy and by recycling. These ideas comforts and necessities. The popu- are compatible with mobile architec- lar ideas of sustainability we have at ture and may become easier to Fig. 42 Roof of Freiburg’s Ganter Brewery, where a 70kWp PV system satisfies 70% of power needs! 33 achieve as technology reveals, for China or Africa, reach a comparable example, more efficient dynamos or standard of development to the USA photoelectric cells (Fig. 42) and more the pollution and drain on energy, if compact ways of processing sewage. the US is anything to go by, will be considerable. People are slowly be- In this age we are faced with a grow- coming aware of their effect on the ing problem: “Atmospheric pollution, environment although perhaps the contamination of rivers by un- George Bush’s recent decisions21 is treated sewage... the abuses result- still an indicator of humanity’s willing- ing from constantly expanding ness to ignore the environment. Re- conurbation’s are only a few symp- cent advances in technology, such toms to be found in many industrial as more efficient photoelectric cells, countries”20 As the population and its wind turbines and nuclear power, all expectations increase so does our provide alternatives to fossil fuels and demand on the earth’s resources. it is interesting to consider the ways When countries that are developing in which a mobile society could use at this present time, such as Brazil, these to enhance their benefit to cur- Fig. 43 The destruction of the rain forest is one of the many environmental issues of today. 34 rent ecological problems. Our ancient regulate their own pollution? Imagine nomadic ancestors did not have to the effect of an industrial revolution create mass power stations. Their sweeping through China or Africa in hunter gatherer life styles were eco- the future. logically friendly. They travelled round, exploited natural resources such as A great amount of our pollution is food and wood and left, allowing the caused by our desire to travel with area to rejuvenate and a natural bal- cars, buses, trains etc. which pump ance to be achieved. Since we be- out all manner of pollutants. It might came static as a society our efficiency be thought that mobile architecture at exploiting nature has proved im- would add to this problem with every- mensely effective except we seem to body having to move a large building have been rather lax at forward think- around with them, congesting roads ing, ironically the trait that allowed us and using fuel but the improved flex- to build structures in the first place. In ibility of life style could help to reduce East Anglia, England the whole area congestion and pollution (Fig. 44). is fairly flat with few trees when only seven hundred years ago most of it, apart from the Fens, was covered in forests. Now the only remnant of that wood use are the few medieval buildings that remain standing. As we speak people in Brazil are finding the Fig. 44 The daily congestion of rush-hour traffic. best way to earn their living is to cut down their own rain forest at the Assuming that roads will be the main alarming rate of 26 hectares or an method of travel in the future is not area the size of 37 football pitches per necessarily correct and if a whole minute (Fig. 43).22 Those of us in the building were capable of moving eas- developed world, who should be set- ily by air-ship, anti-gravity or perhaps ting an example, are only just getting beamed from one place to the other, the idea that environment is important. the need for roads would decrease. The implication is, if we in the devel- The major congestion on our roads is oped world have only just reached this caused by people coming to and from stage how long will it be before those work as demonstrated by the morn- other countries will be in a position to ing and evening rush hour. We al- 35 ready know that the need for travel- in 1979. This house was developed ling to work is decreasing a small to be totally self-sufficient using pho- amount, due to the Internet, but in the toelectric cells and batteries. It is also future working from home might be an example of lateral thinking in terms more common than going to an of- of construction, reusing a mobile of- fice. If it is still necessary to go to a fice chassis with silo sections as a place of work mobile architecture roof. It utilises plastic swimming pool would enable employees to move decking as floor and wall cladding and closer to their office thus reducing the canvas pouches with zips for storage. need for many short car journeys and Heat is provided by solar gains from when they were not working or on a glazed area that also acts as an holidays they could take their home airlock. There is also a small wood elsewhere for a fraction of the energy burning stove for back up and the consumption. Many may see this vi- thick fireproofed insulation ensures sion of the future, i.e. owning your own only minimal heat loss. Rain water self-sufficient portable house, as ri- caught from the gutter is channelled diculous but less than a century ago to a vinyl bladder that can contract many people would have seen the and expand. Fifteen minutes of rain- idea of everyone owning an automo- fall is said to be enough for a whole bile laughable yet this is what has month’s supply. Water pressure is happened. This has lead to our cur- achieved through manual pumps and rent semi-mobile life style where we a filter system allows grey water to be travel between static buildings caus- recycled in a tank. ing pollution and congestion with our vehicles. What we need is a self suf- Another example is the Sustainable ficient building that can move freely Portable Housing (Fig. 46) designed without excessively polluting our en- for Cave Cay in the Bahamas.25 This vironment. housing had to be totally self-sufficient as well easy to assemble and disas- 36 The idea that mobile architecture semble for delivery from Texas, USA could have a role in improving our fu- to the island. The housing was the first ture environment is not a new one. A phase of a five part development good example was The Autonomous scheme of the island. Each unit uses Dwelling Unit24 (Fig. 45) designed by a standard metal shipping container Ted Bakewell III and Michael Jantzen as a structural basis and all of the ar- Fig. 45 The Autonomous Dwelling Unit by Ted Bakewell III and Michael Jantzen, 1979. 37 Staff House in context. Unit packed for transport. Side Elevation. Architectural system assembly. Front Elevation. Fully assembled house. Photovoltaic and electrical system. Water catchment system. Fig. 46 Computer models of the Sustainable Housing Development for Crab Cay, Bahamas. 38 chitectural and environmental compo- grounded in the static, polluted world. nents are designed to fit inside this Their ‘Rokplug’ 26 and ‘Logplug’ 26 for shipping. Cave Cay has no fresh (Fig. 47) concealed themselves in na- water, electricity, oil or gas supply and ture but were always a connection to so to keep the project ecologically the static life style. The architecture friendly attention has been paid to cli- of the future can gain its electricity matic design issues such as cooling, from the sun, filter its grey water, com- ventilation, humidity, building geom- post its sewage and recycle its rub- etry and orientation. The building has bish. Robert Kronenburg points out to desalinate its water and can store that “Structures and building... that rain water when it is available. Mate- have a minimal impact on the envi- rials that were recycled, durable, re- ronment... are now more relevant than sistant to fungus and insect attack ever before”27 were used to keep the building low maintenance. The housing makes Despite our concerns for our effect on use of a prevailing 14 mph breeze for the environment, it is prone to having cooling ventilation and the roof pro- devastating effects on us. Whether vides as much shading and insulation these come in the form of earth- as possible from the sun. Environ- quakes, tornadoes, or tidal waves mental conditions on the island re- they have the common effect of de- main relatively constant minimizing stroying static infrastructure and kill- the need for heating and cooling en- ing many people (Fig. 48a & b). If ergy use. A wind generator and pho- people’s homes were mobile they toelectric cells provide electricity with could move away from the disaster or battery storage. This home seems to if they possessed an architecture that have found solutions to many of the was lighter than air they could simply perceived problems of mobile archi- fly above an earthquake or a tidal tecture. It is both portable and not re- wave. Unfortunately we have not pro- liant on a fixed supply of energy or gressed to that stage yet but mobile water. architecture can play a roll in disaster relief. Offering mobile housing to refu- Archigram had seen the future of gees can sometimes have detrimen- mobile travel as essentially plug-in. tal effects, according to Gordon This does not help the environment Browne of the Southampton Institute because the mobility would always be “Assistance should not breed depen- 39 Fig. 47 A drawing from the Archigram book (pg.111) describing the Logplug and Rokplug. 40 Fig. 48a An earthquake in California destroys the infrastructure. dency and change the desire for utilising sustainable methods of en- people to return home”.28 He goes on ergy production and waste disposal. to suggest that refugees from a disas- It can also help in situations where ter should be encouraged to rebuild natural disasters have left many their own settlement that has been people homeless in a hostile environ- destroyed and temporary shelter ment. should utilise local materials and building methods. However, in isolated disaster situations there may be a lack of sanitation. Refugees and aid workers will require fresh water, heat etc. In these circumstances couldn’t mobile architecture be used as a permanent solution? We can see that mobile architecture is fashioned by the environment in which it exists but can also help to tackle problems, like pollution, by Fig. 48b Mobile architecture could move out of the path of a tornado. 41 Travelling through technology Out of all the factors that have been ably still be tribal. So if we can develop mentioned and discussed, technology like this out of so many opposing cul- is of overriding importance to mobile tures then it seems reasonable to pre- architecture. For the past thousand sume that the future will adapt to a years countries have been develop- mobile world with few boundaries. Al- ing from tribal nations, with small fac- though this may be possible we do tions fighting each other, to a single have some way to go. Some cultures nation that is, more or less, united. In differ so much that they clash, the re- England even the great Roman em- sults of which we can see at the mo- pire found it hard to crush the tribal ment, but as Bill Clinton pointed out factions during their time from 55 - 450 in the Dimbleby lecture 2001 “What AD. After that the ensuing battles for this is all about is that simple ques- power between the Saxons, Angles, tion: which will be more important in Jutes not to mention the Celts divided the twenty first century - our differ- the country between 450 - 1066 AD. ences or our common humanity?”30 It was probably when the Norman’s invaded that the beginnings of a na- We have already mentioned Apicella tion evolved. Now we have the United associates’ TSB pavilion (Fig. 19) but Kingdom and we are part of the Eu- it is helpful to look at it in more detail ropean Union along with many other to see how important technology has countries. The course of history been throughout its design process seems to be moving towards ever (Fig 49a & b). Drawing from Robert larger political units and ultimately, Kronenburg’s analysis, the design perhaps, to a united world.29 was to act as a mobile bank and hospitality facility for TSB. The initial idea was to create a pavilion that would overriding effect on these issues? take on a unique form when as- Today the world is continually being sembled from a standard unit that made a smaller place and without could fit on a 13.5 m articulated trailer. technology, such as the boat, the Even though the exact site locations plane, the television, the phone, the had not been established it was Internet and satellites, it would prob- thought that they might include exter- 42 So how does technology have an Fig. 49a Apicella associates’ Mobile TSB in its erected state, welcoming and outward looking. nal exhibitions and public events dur- need to run electronic equipment and ing the summer months and at other sustain its users working environment times staff training around the UK. The even when situated away from a client specified that transportation and power source and in harsh weather assembly costs should not exceed conditions. The final product was to £4000 per deployment and that four be brought to completion within seven men should take no more than two months, a surprisingly short time span days to transform the vehicle into a for such a complicated building.31 building. Great care was taken by Apicella to investigate appropriate The structure, when unfolded, seems technology, materials and assembly to relate very little to its mobile nature. methods. This would ensure that the Despite its technological approach transformation process was highly this type of architecture, rather than efficient and that the final building embracing its ephemerality, cleverly would be of high quality, lasting for at disguises the mechanisms that least five years, as opposed to a tem- moves it whilst simultaneously incor- porary hut. The building would also porating them into the structure: “the 43 trailer base was used for the lower truck in such an innovative way dis- floor and four hydraulic rams... lifted plays the flexibility of mobile architec- another ‘Russian doll structure’... to ture when appropriate technologies form an upper story”.32 Mobile archi- are used. tecture can learn a lot from this example. Stage set design specialists Another example of technology shap- were used for their knowledge in hy- ing architecture is that of the Carlos draulics. The design of the sunshade Mosely Music Pavilion (Fig. 50) de- and the use of a balcony along with a signed by FTL Happold.33 The New glazed facade work together to cre- York Philharmonic and Metropolitan ate the impression of an outward look- Opera required a structure that could ing yet welcoming building. The lateral host a different concert in a different approach of using a standard lorry New York park each night. Goldsmith saw that “the notions of deployability require an even greater level of engineering, akin more to machinery than to architecture”33. This project uses six semi-trailers and three dressingroom trucks. The trailers contain all the construction equipment for the structure “including forklifts, hydraulic opening devices and winches”. 33 The structures also required foundations which were provided by specially redesigned truck that could accommodate concrete ballast. The erected building consists of three centrally hinged trusses that can fold in half for transportation. These create a tripod that is maintained by the adapted concrete foundation trucks. A tension structure membrane of PVC-coated polyester fabric is used as a roof which can be rolled up when in transit. To Fig. 49b Sections showing the bank’s innovative transformation. 44 hold the roof in place metal cables Fig. 50 The Carlos Mosely Music Pavilion set against the New York sky line. were replaced by ropes so that they mechanism and the cladding by its could be rolled up without being de- acoustic requirements creating “a mix- tached. The structural elements were ture of architecture, industrial design governed by the pavilion’s erection and engineering”.34 45 Moving with the military Another reason why human kind has although these were probably not mili- developed mobile architecture is for tary. Tents were often present at me- fighting, an undeniable human in- dieval battles and we can see ex- stinct. The tent has always been used amples in many medieval battle field by armies on campaign. Relief carv- paintings (Fig. 52). The construction ings from Nineveh (Fig. 51) depict of siege engines employed various tents, similar to those found in the portable elements although catapults same area today, being used for mili- and ballistas are more weapons than tary purposes.35 Tents in themselves architecture. The siege tower (Fig. 53) have been around for over 40,000 is much more akin to mobile architec- years with one of the oldest sites be- ture being sturdy, and portable in de- ing found in Molodova, Russia where sign like a mobile fortress. Siege war- an oval site 4-5 m in diameter was sur- fare was around from the time of the rounded by mammoth bones which Hittites 1380 B.C. and lasted to the may have been used for tent poles, time of Sebastien de Vauban, Louis Fig. 51 A relief carving from Nineveh shows the age tents being used for military purposes. 46 Fig. 52 Tents in use at an engagement during the Wars of the Roses around 1455. Fig. 53 A siege tower also known as a malvoisin (‘bad neighbour’) being used in a heavy attack. 47 XIV’s cheif military engineer.36 the 1870’s cast iron improved and extended the versatility of mobile An achievement pushed forward by bridges. Modern mobile bridges are the military is the development of the designed and built from advanced mobile bridge. This part of mobile ar- materials and employ a number of chitecture is strongly influenced by modular techniques for deployment. function but does reveal techniques Often vehicle mounted bridges use that could be used in other mobile hydraulics to improve the efficiency of structures. It also demonstrates how deployment which is vital in military important technology is in the devel- situations. There are three types of opment of mobile architecture: “The military bridge, the most interesting evolution of mobile military bridging il- being the Close Support Bridge. This lustrates how operational consider- must be unfolded quickly in direct fir- ations and material developments are ing line and requires the crew to be leading to more sophisticated con- sheltered throughout the procedure. cepts”.37 The need to cross obstacles The other two types of bridge can be has always been crucial in military constructed more conventionally. The campaigns. The Romans used huge British Army use a No.10 CSB (Fig. stone and timber constructions but by 54) that is transported on tracks and Fig. 54 A closed support bridge is speedily deployed across a dried up river bed. 48 uses a three stage hydraulic proce- half hours to erect and covers a space dure for unfolding. Weighing in at 13 9m by 30m with a height of 6m. Spe- tonnes, it takes just three minutes to cialists are not required to erect it bridge a 26 m gap and can be folded which enables a team of soldiers to up from either end in less than five do the job. Although this structure is which points to the potential of me- intended to be primarily functional it chanical systems within civilian mobile creates an original appearance schemes.38 unique to itself. Its designers believed that the form “expresses its portable The Transportable Maintenance En- nature in every way as an entirely ‘soft’ closure (Fig. 55a & b) is often referred organic structure”39 This type of inflat- to in mobile architecture books. This able environment does have various is an air supported structure intended downfalls such as a constant need for to be light (1150kg) and quickly air top up and high pressure air beams deployable to provide shelter for the run the risk of loosing their rigidity maintenance of military vehicles, such when a rupture occurs. as helicopters. It takes just one and a Left : Fig. 55a A computer model clearly showing the air filled supports. Below: Fig. 55b The inside of the structure is spacious and tall. 49 The art of mobility Even if our ideal mobile architecture bile architecture as a negative force: is well designed and considers all “The mobile box discourages open technologies, social problems, envi- form, balconies and bridges”23 This ronmental issues and politics, isn’t is a typical misconception about mo- there still a danger of the world be- bile architecture. We have seen, from coming a giant trailer park? In many the example of Apicella’s Mobile cases technology’s need for efficiency Bank, that mobile architecture does leads to standardisation which is seen not have to be “a capsule, whose skin by some as a step away from the art is pierced for access”23 as the bank in architecture : “in human terms, in includes a balcony and glass facade. terms of allowing each man to shape the objects he fabricates as well as Arnheim addresses the problem of his force context in mobile architecture: “Its in- [standardisation] is absurd, if not ac- dividual appearance derives from its tively destructive”.40 There are many own character, not from that of a par- people who would agree and not find ticular location it is intended to fit”23. a Portakabin (Fig. 56) aesthetically This reveals the potentials of mobile environment, this architecture to stimulate its surroundings. Ada Kwiatkowska believes “trace is a real deformation of space”.41 A mobile building, whether bank or house is ephemeral but its “trace” on the landscape might be Fig. 56 A Portakabin - aesthetically pleasing? more important than its physical effect. Kwiatkowska goes on to say: “Such traces as handmarks printed on an interesting view of mobile architec- [a] cave’s wall in the Paleolithic age... ture from 1977. He refers to Vincent are signs of human beings’ identifica- Scully who speculates that: “the mo- tion”.41 However, even a mobile build- bile home is the germ of tomorrow’s ing can be designed to operate within architecture, which will... make pos- generalised contexts, such as town or sible a more mobile architecture”.23 countryside, so its physical effect on Arnheim himself seems to view mo- the surroundings can still be designed 50 pleasing. Rudolf Arnheim represents for. Arnheim suggests that mobile ar- fetched and naive? If we told a medi- chitecture “contravenes the wealth of eval person that in the future they local variation”.23 Doesn’t this pre- could travel at the speed of their own sume that mobile architecture is to- voice, talk to people on the other side tally standardised? Even if this were of the planet and fly, would that be any the case it can hardly be denied that less far-fetched to them? The point diachronic variation is present within stands that technology will make many standard things, such as the many things possible in the future, as personal touches in trailer parks or the has been discussed, and although we diversity of car styles. Arnheim defines are all in a position to speculate no local variation as the “urban apart- one is in a position to tell us it can’t ment, the rural farmhouse and the happen. Arnheim sees “the traditional mountain cottage”23 and one can see house, rooted in the ground”23 as al- his point. If mobile architecture were ways serving the “productive role of epitomised by the Portakabin one counterpoint to human mobility”23a might be concerned but we have es- but we can see that the “traditional tablished that this is not the case. The house” is insignificant in terms of ar- needs that have created Arnheim’s chitectural evolution and thus serves vernacular examples are the same us as a product of our technologically human needs that are pushing us in governed existence. One of mobile the direction of a mobile ideal. We architectures’ appealing attributes is have seen from examples that mobile that of giving freedom. When we want architecture does not have to be a to be mobile our houses can be mo- standardised “box”. Of course bile and when we find it advantageous standardisation may be a solution to to be static our house could be as well. the problem that Arnheim is con- There is, of course, cause for endless cerned with. If we become a totally debate about planning issues in this mobile society again our ideal mobile changing world. building could exist as standard modules that fit into the shell of a “tradi- The initial stage of developing tech- tional house”. Many rooms within nology is an art in itself: “In technol- buildings are standardised like a box, ogy, inadequacy, not necessity, is the of one size or another, so in theory mother of all invention... The Imagi- couldn’t most buildings be adapted to nation feeds upon available mate- accept standard modules? Far- rial”.42 Thus it can create something 51 new as is the case in architecture. As attention to its technological side. Jurgen Joedicke stated in 1969: “if Norman Foster’s and Anthony Caro’s science is understood by the formu- Millennium Bridge (Fig. 57), fancifully lation of communicable, verifiable and described as a ‘blade of light’, is un- realisable propositions... wide areas deniably spectacular but because of of an architect’s work can be included insufficient deference to engineering in this category”43 Many architects principles its shape caused a detri- have regarded science and technol- mental interaction between walking Fig. 57 Foster and Caro’s Millennium Bridge, too little attention to practicalities lead to its closure so repairs could be undertaken. ogy as something that lacks artistic crowds and the elasticity of the struc- input and creativity. Throughout the ture. On the other hand the motorway eighteenth and nineteenth centuries bridges of the M1 (Fig. 58), although “The task of the architect was clearly including some aesthetic elements of defined... his duty was to search for an image... This meant attention to ‘style’ - the appearance of a building rather than its substance”44 Of course not all architects thought in this way but there is, even today, a tendency not to fully understand technology and to follow a purely artistic design route. Fig. 58 An M1motorway bridge, monotonous and uninspired. Of recent times there has been a divide between architect and engineer. design, are monotonous and unin- Hence the reason they remain sepa- spired. They are the result of practi- rate entities. Recent examples show cality, efficiency and standardisation. the reality of what happens when ar- A good example of a balance being chitectural design doesn’t pay enough achieved between engineering and 52 architecture is in The Inflatable Space been constructed it still demonstrates Habitat (Fig. 59a,b & c) designed by the thought processes that are re- Kriss Kennedy and engineered by quired in building such an advanced NASA. Although only prototypes have piece of architecture.45 Fig. 59 Cut away drawing of the mission control module. Fig. 59b The primary habitation module. 53 The habitat is the first stage of es- modules in an appropriate order ac- tablishing permanent bases on the cording to function. Crew quarters moon. Its main task is to provide safe consist of individual rooms that incor- and instantaneous shelter from the porate modular furniture and have lunar habitat. This lunar building movable partitions varying in colour utilises inflatable technology to cope and design. This area also includes with its criteria and employs a modu- recreational, storage and kitchen fa- lar system for constructional flexibil- cilities. The other level deals with base ity. The first module to be installed is control, missions and other technicali- a small self-sufficient tube that will ties. Due to the inflatable nature of the sustain the base personnel while the modules, strong, light weight materi- other modules are assembled. Mod- als such as Kevlar have been used to ules containing life support or to act construct the envelope. An external as connection nodes would follow a support structure that consists of a similar principle. The main part of the modular space frame is laterally habitat takes account of adaptabil- braced by the internal floors. This is ity, construction methods and the lu- made from an aluminium lithium alloy. nar environment in its design. A cir- The construction of a project like this cular tube of 8 m diameter and 45 m demonstrates the need for knowledge in length is internally designed to ac- of materials, lateral thinking and con- commodate 120 cubic m of space struction processes as well as detailed per inhabitant, based on research environmental design to suit the inhab- into living for extended time periods itants. Robert Kronenburg states that in small spaces. A lot of time has the “spin-offs that have resulted from been spent on designing with the technology developed for space ex- needs of the occupants in mind. The ploration have been significant” 45a open plan approach allows the in- and he points to Aluminium lithium and habitants to alter the internal space Kevlar as examples of materials that depending on their tasks and also are now in use in the aerospace in- makes alteration easier. It is also dustries and Kevlar has also proved good from a psychological perspec- valuable in tension structures on earth. tive, in terms of long term inhabita- Also the construction techniques could tion, allowing the inhabitants to have have many uses in the field of mobile control over their environment. The architecture on earth. design of the habitat places different 54 Fig. 59c The Inflatable Space Habitat deployment sequence. 55 Although space architecture represents an extreme, sculptural form that has been developed to be efficient from an engineering perspective might also contain some lessons for mobile architecture. The work of Santiago Calatrava would generally be classed as static architecture but much of his work contains moving structures that have been designed in a balanced way. Sound technological principles are taken in to account with a high quality of design to fashion natural, sensible and elegant structures. His Municipal Hall and redesign of Plaza Espana, Alcoy, Spain46 (Fig. 60) demonstrate his innovative use of mobile components within a static structure. Below street level the hall follows the narrow triangle created by the plaza above, the overall length being around 80 metres while the width of 15.6 m, at one end, slims to 9 m at the other. The main structure that moves resembles the Fig. 60 The main structure resembles a wave as it folds back. action of a wave as it folds back. It Ernstings textile building in Coesfeld, consists of a number of steel slats Germany (Fig. 61). Calatrava, Bruno which create a natural form that can Reichlin and Fabio Reinhart won a lie flush with the pavement and open competition to redesign the facade of to induce a sculptural form whilst re- the existing industrial structure. They vealing a mirror like pool beneath. The were faced with a relatively conven- whole assembly is powered by sev- tional building with three large open- eral motors that can operate the fold- ings on one side. The materials and ing structure. Utilising a similar struc- texture of the doors are exactly the ture are the doors on the Fabbrica same as the rest of the facade so as 56 Fig. 61 The doors turn into a sequence of sinuous awnings on the Fabbrica Ernstings building. not to break the continuity of the cladding. Each door is opened with a motor by a system of slats and joints. This enables the rectangular doors to change into a sequence of sinuous awnings that mark out the entrances. Transforming a seemingly mundane object, such as an industrial door, into something sculptural yet practical is a mobile form to change in response to its context. The Kuwait Pavilion, Seville,48 (Fig. 62a & b) although static as a whole, enables options for many alternative configurations. This building was commissioned for Kuwait when it participated in Seville’s Expo ’92. Its rib-like roof elements can move a process of lateral thinking that should be applied in mobile architecture. The idea of folding parts of a building up, not only allows space to be saved in transport but can also be used to create sculptural forms based on technical knowledge: “Motion gives an unexpected dimension to form, making it seem a living thing”. 47 Movement also offers the potential for Fig. 62a The ribbed roof elements can move inderpendently. 57 Fig. 62b Calatrava’s Kuwait Pavilion built for Seville’s Expo’ 92. 58 by means of hydraulics and counter- about five years ago and now it is the weights independently of each other. fastest selling piece of technology During the day time the roof structures ever with 1 in 25 of the population provide shading and in the evening owning one. This shows that the they can move outward to form a to- people of today are ready to embrace tally open space (Fig. 62c). new technologies making the time right for sophisticated mobile architecture to flourish. People are beginning to expect greater things from the environment and architecture that surrounds them. For years the ideas of futuristic travelling methods, like the ‘beaming-up’ devices on the Starship Enterprise (Fig. 63) or Babylon Five, have been Fig. 62c The roof elements begin to open out in Calatrava’s Kuwait Pavilion. Fig. 63 The Starship Enterprise. Something that widely effects a new developed in the apparent reality of technology is the willingness of people film. Whilst computer effects create to use it. In the early days advance technology that is way ahead of its was slow because people were wary time or simply ridiculous, it is this world of new inventions. The telephone is a that people are expecting. Architects good example. From the first demon- will ignore these expectations at their stration of the telephone, by own cost. Already the way in which Alexander Graham Bell in 1876, it took architects present their buildings is 25 years until only one in every fifty becoming more and more technology Americans owned one. The first dem- related with all manner of computer onstration of the DVD player was programs for building structures and 59 the same thing will become a neces- are already becoming scientists, hav- sity if they are to realise the potential ing to take more responsibility for en- for the increasing array of technology vironmental science and material sci- available to them. Should an architect ence. They are no longer just the de- really claim to have designed a build- signers of a ‘style’44 or whim. It is be- ing when he doesn’t understand the coming increasingly likely that merg- nature of its materials, mechanics and ing scientist and architect into one and computer electronics? 60 presenting virtual buildings. Architects Conclusion We can see that mobile architecture adaptability make it a logical step for- is an evolving entity that has been a ward to help mankind progress vital part of human evolution. Its ef- whether that is to the stars or simply fects have been far reaching and to enjoy a better life style. The ideas have played a role in human life of a mobile world have already been throughout the ages whether for shel- explored by the likes of Archigram and ter, art, war or fun. Mobile architecture in many films. These visions seem to is a subject of balance where tech- reflect some of the desires for mobil- nology, science, politics and environ- ity present in humanity. Of course, ment are vital for it to flourish. At the technologies such as the Internet moment divisions slow down the might well produce a static society progress of architecture and archi- where everything is delivered to the tects are only beginning to take on the individual by automatons and where scientific interest that they need in or- going on holiday means to wire your der to create a new wave of mobile brain up to a program that creates a living. We want and need mobile ar- total virtual world where you can smell, chitecture and the conversion to a touch, taste, and see. Although mobile society could well alleviate today’s buildings are static our soci- some of the problems associated with ety is always seen as fast moving. It our present existence, such as envi- is in people’s nature that they must ronmental issues. An ideal mobile ar- move. A common punishment is to chitecture does not exist yet although the potential for many self sufficient, self powered, free moving buildings does. It will take a long time before cultural divides can be sufficiently broken for a truly mobile world. Most mobile architecture today must undergo a change before it becomes mobile but the versatility of mobile architecture, its efficiency, its potential for beauty and functionality and its Fig. 64 Confinement! A typical modern prison cell. 61 deprive people of this need by confin- ronment that is suited to humanity’s ing them to a space or putting them in changing needs. prison (Fig. 64). So the architect of the future should All these changes needed before we take account of this instinctive desire can escape the English winter over- and be inspired, by a sound under- night in our own beds and reach that standing of science, technology, poli- blue lagoon may take centuries - a tics and psychology applied with the short time in evolution. passion of an artist to create an envi- 62 Notes 1 Claire Ainsworth, New Scientist magazine, vol. 171 issue 2299, 14/07/2001, page 7 Article : Ancient Ethiopian shakes the evolutionary tree. 2 Chris Stringer, head of human origins group at the Natural History Museum, London. Quoted by Peter Hadfield, New Scientist magazine, vol. 165 issues 2228, 04/03/2000, page 4 - Article : Gimme shelter. 3 From the British Museum Webpage http://www.mesopotamia.co.uk/time/homemain.html 4 From The Encyclopedia Britannica, published 1970 - Volume 16, pg. 558 - Nomads. 5 Robert Kronenburg, Houses in motion, pg. 7. 6 From The Macmillan Encyclopedia, published 1994 - pg. 861 - Neolithic. 7 A description of Maurice Agis’ work can be found in Portable Architecture by Robert Kronenburg (see bibliography) pg. 136 - 143. 8 The history for the industrial revolution has been based on information from the following books which are also listed in the bibliography: Man the Builder by JPM Pannell, The Pelican History of Art by Henry-Russell Hitchcock; A Concise History of Western Architecture by R. Furneaux Jordan. 9 Information about the steam engine: The Macmillan Encyclopedia, published 1994 pg. 1156 - Steam engine 10 The history of Coalbrookdale, Menai bridge and Clifton suspension bridge is based on info. from Man the Builder by JPM Pannell, Coalbrookdale - pg. 226-7; Menai bridge pg. 33, 228, 230-2, 246; Clifton suspension bridge - pg. 238. 11 The history of Paxton and the Crystal Palace is based on info. from A Concise History of Western Architecture by R. Furneaux Jordan - pg. 295; The Pelican History of Art by Henry-Russell Hitchcock - pg. 184-6. 12 Robert Kronenburg talking about the ideas of Martin Heidegger; Ephemeral/Portable Architecture - pg. 7. 13 A description of the Hong Kong Tourist Association Pavilion can be found in Portable Architecture by Robert Kronenburg - pg. 51. It is very similar to the Mobile TSB Bank buildingwhich is discussed in detail later in the dissertation. 14 Archigram, edited by Peter Cook - pg. 86. 15 Archigram, edited by Peter Cook - pg. 94. 16 Archigram, edited by Peter Cook - pg. 89. 17 Information from The Airship - A History, Basil Collier - pg. 190. 63 18 Archigram, edited by Peter Cook - pg. 80. 19 Story of the airship based on information from the following books: The Airship - A History, Basil Collier - pg. 188-207; The Zeppelin Story, W. Robert Nitske; Jane’s Pocket Book 7 - Airship Development, Lord Ventry & Eugene M. Kolesnik - R100 pg.134, 136-137; R101 pg. 138-140. Website:http://www.aht.ndirect.co.uk/airships/r101/index.html 20 Jurgen Joedicke, Architecture since 1945 - pg. 167 21 President Bush pulled out of the Kyoto accord which was designed to limit gas emis sions blamed by some scientists for global warming. March 2001. 22 Statistics from the WWF website: http://www.panda.org/resources/publications/forest/f2/ 23 Rudolf Arnheim, The Dynamics of Architectural Form - pg. 145. 23a Rudolf Arnheim, The Dynamics of Architectural Form - pg. 146. 24 Based on information from the book Transportable Environments edited by R. Kronenburg - From article by Sigrun Prahl, Gimme Shelter, pg.73. 25 Based on information from the book Transportable Environments edited by R. Kronenburg - From article by Huy Ngo, Glenn Hill, David Driskill and Joe Aranha, Sus tainable Portable Housing, Cave Cay, Bahamas, pg. 126. 26 Archigram, edited by Peter Cook - pg. 111. 27 Robert Kronenburg, Transportable Environments - pg. 4. 28 Gordon Browne of the Southampton Institute, Transportable Environments edited by R. Kronenburg - pg. 84. 29 History based on information from the book The Story of England by Christopher Hibbert - pg. 28-39 30 Bill Clinton speaking at the Dimbleby lecture 2001. The full transcript can be found at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/news_comment/dimbleby/clinton.shtml The exact quote can be found at: http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/news_comment/dimbleby/clinton11.shtml 31 Information on the TSB Mobile Bank and Hospitality Facility is based on Robert Kronenburg’s description in Portable Architecture by Robert Kronenburg - pg. 47-49. 32 Robert Kronenburg, Portable Architecture - pg. 48. 33 Nicholas Goldsmith, article in the book Ephemeral/Portable Architecture, Architectural Design entitled Explorations in Ephemeral Architecture - pg. 31. 34 Nicholas Goldsmith, article in the book Ephemeral/Portable Architecture, Ar chitectural Design entitled Explorations in Ephemeral Architecture - pg. 32. 64 35 Information from Eureka - An Illustrated History of Inventions... edited by Edward de Bono - Tent, pg. 133. 36 Information from Eureka - An Illustrated History of Inventions... edited by Edward de Bono - Siege engine, pg. 164. 37 R.C. Connor & I.J. Dunn, Mobile and Rapidly Assembled Structures III, pg. 1. 38 Account based on information from Mobile and Rapidly Assembled Structures III edited by F. Escrig & C. A. Brebbia - pg. 6. 39 Robert Kronenburg, Portable Architecture - pg. 101. 40 John Kenneth Galbraith, The New Industrial State, pg. 11-12, (1967) as quoted by Charles Jencks and Nathan Silver in the book Adhocism - pg. 19. 41 Ada Kwiatkowska, Transportable Environments edited by R. Kronenburg - pg. 19. 42 Charles Jencks and Nathan Silver, Adhocism - pg. 106. 43 Jurgen Joedicke, Architecture since 1945 - pg. 171. 44 Robert Kronenburg, Spirit of the Machine by Robert Kronenburg - pg. 28. 45 Description of Inflatable Lunar Habitat based on info. from the website: http://www.abo.fi/~mlindroo/Station/Slides/sld049b.htm & the book Portable Architecture, Robert Kronenburg, - pg. 144-154. 45a Robert Kronenburg, Portable Architecture - pg. 153. 46 Descriptions of Calatrava’s Municipal Hall and redesign of Plaza Espana based on info. from the book Santiago Calatrava by Luca Molinari - pg. 56. 47 Santiago Calatrava, Santiago Calatrava by Luca Molinari - pg. 46. 48 Descriptions of Calatrava’s Kuwait Pavilion, Seville, Spain based on info. from the book Santiago Calatrava by Luca Molinari - pg. 70. 65 Bibliography Books Arnheim, Rudolf The Dynamics of Architectural Form. University of California Press, 1977. Buchanan, Peter Renzo Piano Building Workshop. Phaidon, London, 1993. Collier, Basil The Airship - A History. Hart-Davis, MacGibbon, London, 1974. Cook, Peter Archigram. Princeton Architectural Press, New York, 1999. de Bono, Edward Eureka - An illustrated history of inventions... (Editor) Holt, Rinehart and Winston, new York, 1979. Escrig, F., Mobile and Rapidly Assembled Structures III. Brebbia C.A. WIT press, Southampton, Boston, 2000. (Editors) Furneaux-Jordan, R. A Concise History of Western Architecture. Thames & Hudson, London, 1976. Hibbert, Christopher The Story of England. Phaidon Press, London, 1992. Hitchcock, Henry-Russell The Pelican History of Art - Architecture 19th & 20th Centuries. Penguin Books, London, 1971. 66 Jencks, Charles, Adhocism - The Case for Improvisation. Silver, Nathan Anchor Press, New York, 1973. Joedicke, Jurgen Architecture Since 1945. Pall Mall Press, London, 1969. Kronenburg, Robert Ephemeral / Portable Architecture. (Guest Editor) Academy Editions, London, 1998. Kronenburg, Robert Houses in Motion. Academy Editions, London, 1995. Kronenburg, Robert Portable Architecture - Second Edition. Architectural Press, Oxford, 2000. Kronenburg, Robert Transportable Environments. (Editor) E & FN SPON, London, 1998. Kronenburg, Robert Spirit of the Machine. Wiley-Academy, London, 2001. Molinari, Luca Santiago Calatrava. Skira, Milan, 1999. Nitske, Robert W. The Zeppelin Story. Barnes and Co, New York, 1977. Pannell, J.P.M. Man the Builder. Book Club Associates, London, 1977. Tzonis, Alexander, Movement, Structure and the work of Santiago Lefaivre, Liane Calatrava. Boston, 1995. Unstead, R.J. Years of the Sword. Macdonald & Co. , London, 1984. 67 Ventry, Lord & Jane’s Pocket Book 7 - Airship Development. Kolesnik, Eugene M. Macdonald & Jane’s, London, 1976. Williams, Captain T.B. Airship Pilot No.28. William Kimber & Co, London, 1974. Encyclopedias The Macmillan Encyclopedia, 1995 Edition. Pan Macmillan, London, 1994. The Encyclopedia Britannica - Volumes 1-23. Encyclopedia Britannica, 1970. Magazines New Scientist, vol 165 issue 2228, 04/03/2000 New Scientist, vol 171 issue 2299, 14/07/2001 Website resources http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/news_comment/dimbleby/clinton.shtml http://www.bbc.co.uk/arts/news_comment/dimbleby/clinton11.shtml http://www.aht.ndirect.co.uk/airships/r101/index.html http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_662000/662794.stm http://www.mesopotamia.co.uk/time/homemain.html http://archive.newscientist.com/archive.jsp?id=22280300 http://www.panda.org/resources/publications/forest/f2/ http://www.ilcdover.com/products/spaceInf/Habitats.htm http://www.jsc.nasa.gov/er/seh/gotomoon.html http://www.abo.fi/~mlindroo/Station/Slides/sld049b.htm. 68 69 70