The architecture field is in desperate need for more channels like this. We really need to get better at sharing and communicating ideas and techniques to the public but also each other. We're barely building on each other's knowledge any more, every office is like a closed off bubble. Great job with the channel
@DaNuff13372 жыл бұрын
Sweden’s architecture is an absolute mess, for some reason our government loves building concrete cubes á la USSR😅
@fgarciz2 жыл бұрын
Blue Ocean Strategy 🤩
@simonkempe12122 жыл бұрын
@@DaNuff1337 No our construction companies love it.
@zynifi2 жыл бұрын
B1M is a good one
@janhurst5442 жыл бұрын
Closed off bubbles is the bread and butter of capitalism and competition. If not for a capitalistic system we would be sharing patents and building on them in many different ways. Collaboration is always faster than independent innovative competition. But the only thing the world sees is money, not long term societal benefit. We could have solved climate change by now.
@saynotop2w2 жыл бұрын
These were used in OEF(Afghanistan war) as field hospitals and troop dwelling. The downside was that they get very hot as is, but that was solved by applying spray foam insulation on the outside. A structure that could house hundreds of troops could be raised in as little as three days and would last for years withstanding dust storms. Truly fascinating technology.
@420AlucardMr2 жыл бұрын
Wow glad I read this because here I was thinking damn now people can pop buildings instead of burning them. After reading this made me realize how durable they are I mean to stand and not fall in a dust storm is a feat of its own.
@ddegn2 жыл бұрын
The materials used in inflatables are not necessarily Teflon. According to Wikipedia, the Echo I balloon satellite was made from metalized Mylar. Mylar is brand name for polyethylene terephthalate (PET or PETE). Teflon is a brand name for polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE). Most "Mylar" balloons are actually made from metalized nylon. Remember comments are good for "the algorithm" even if the comment is pointing out an error which are inconsequential to the subject of the video. I'm a chemist and I find it hard to keep track of all the various types of plastics. I'm planning on making a radio controlled dirigible and I've learned aluminumized nylon appears to be a common material for making lighter than air balloon envelopes. Thanks for another interesting and entertaining video.
@kateapple12 жыл бұрын
He also isn’t mentioning that these materials are made with forever chemicals. Which are the worst thing possible for us and the environment. So don’t mind me if I’m not super stoked for more forever chemicals lol
@M33f3r2 жыл бұрын
Mylar is amazing at holding air, or even helium. A Mylar helium balloon can last for months.
@ddegn2 жыл бұрын
@@M33f3r Is it the Mylar or the metal coating which is good at holding helium. Most "mylar balloons" are actually metalized nylon. You are right about these metalized plastic films being great holding gasses. Without the metal, they're not as great.
@siege36242 жыл бұрын
I was about to ask what is the function of the metallic coating, thanks for the comments
@M33f3r2 жыл бұрын
@@ddegn I didn’t know. Just used to one someone who worked with balloons for a living.
@needamuffin2 жыл бұрын
Fascinating as always. I was expecting the WWII inflatable anecdote to be the inflatable tanks and barracks used to exaggerate the apparent size of armies from above (that was actually used a bit in WWI too), but I didn't know about the radar dome application so that's a fun new fact. One thing I will say is that it would be helpful if you had captions to tell which buildings and cities are being shown with the stock footage. For example, the building at 7:19 is absolutely gorgeous and I would like to know more about it and potentially visit it, but I don't know where it is or what it's called without having to do some digging first. Having that name up front would be very helpful.
@RichardArpin2 жыл бұрын
@needamuffin, it's called La Grande Arche, it was in The Bourne Identity.
@matthewgarcia33562 жыл бұрын
I haven't watched the full video, but Ima leave this comment anyway, if NASA got the same level of budgeting the military got, we would be living in a sci-fi dreamscape right now. The way those researchers solve any problem they put their minds to with the crumbs of funding they get is astonishing.
@Rampant162 жыл бұрын
The military has invented or contributed towards a lot of inventions too. Off the top of my head: rockets, satellites, GPS, computers/computer networking, nuclear energy, autonomous vehicles, the Interstate Highway System, a ton of airplane-related things.
@PickAPocky2 жыл бұрын
Sorry to burst your bubble but a NASA shares the budget within contracts with the military, and most of the work NASA does is in cooperation with the military.
@matthewgarcia33562 жыл бұрын
@@PickAPocky that’s why it took nasa 20 years to build a 10 billion dollar telescope, but Lockheed Martin burned through almost 2 trillion in that same time for the f35, right?
@istvankovats85412 жыл бұрын
@@Rampant16 also keeping the rest of the world in terror and poverty to maintain the imperialist hegemony. that ones a side note though. Besides, it's worth every penny if youre a billionaire. Nothing like cheap labor in a dominated country on the other side of the world.
@gljames242 жыл бұрын
@@Rampant16 Most of that was through DARPA which isn't always funded a well as the rest of the military.
@Snrage5532 жыл бұрын
4:26 inspiring how walter bird died at 14 and left a mark on architecture while aging three times as fast as a normal human
@Pixelhead932 жыл бұрын
Good, i'm not the only one wondering. :D
@toyotagaz2 жыл бұрын
lmfao, i think it was a mistake
@Snrage5532 жыл бұрын
@@toyotagaz obviously
@skylarking122 жыл бұрын
NASA developed inflate-able module technology for the space station "in-house", but then cancelled that particular program during budget contractions, and the ISS was designed a number of times in development, deleting the inflatable. A man named Bigelowe bought the patents and kept developing the idea into a series of very successful space habitat modules that were proved successfully on-orbit for years. The circle was complete when NASA added an experimental Bigelowe module called BEAM to the international space station a few years ago, and the tech shows promise for future space station construction as well as long-duration lunar and Mars missions, packing more useable volume into smaller packages... but the slow pace of this acceptance left Bigelowe without a market, and his company folded a year or two ago. You can innovate a lot, but without a market to accept and use the innovation, your stuff can die on the vine.
@MaticTheProto Жыл бұрын
America sucks
@br22662 жыл бұрын
Hey Stewart, I’m an architecture student at ACC in Austin texas, and I’m John. I’ve found your videos along with so many other KZbin people to be so very helpful. I thank you for all the inspiration you have passed along, because it’s people like you who’ve kept my dreams going. Thanks man, I’m glad you love making the videos because I love watching them!!!! 😊
@alsebu2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this channel your passion project and creating all this great content throughout the time. I wish had you as a professor when I was at arch school. Now on the subject of inflatable architecture, there's enough material to make part 2, I would love to dig more into die spaces with membranes + community building
@Davett532 жыл бұрын
In 1974, while I was attending Ohio University, in Athens, Ohio, I was pursuing my BFA in sculpture. In one of my sculpture classes we were assigned to design our own inflatable, (sculpture). It could be any size, as long it was at least as large as 4 foot square. We used a thin, but durable clear plastic material that could be (welded) together with a basic electric clothing iron. I created a 7 X 7 foot square cube room. I used a 10 inch diameter electric fan, to inflate it and there was a simple flap door, just large enough for me & some friends, to crawl inside. I could easily seal the edges instantly with clear tape, before it lost all its air. Maybe not the most original,.... but it seemed to have the "wow factor" for its size. Set up in my tiny apartment, it took up a whole room. In the student gallery, it became an iconic "Pop Art" form.
@ShaunChang5152 жыл бұрын
It’s early so I’ll leave a comment. I have nothing to do with architecture whatsoever, but your videos offer a lens into this art to someone like me, always feel intrigued and inspired by your content, thanks Prof.!
@ericstephenson99242 жыл бұрын
There was an article in a science mag I read in the 90s about AquaTecture by a prof out of Chicago where they'd use water/liquids instead of air and in some cases a vacuum and circulation system to raise massive structures. I haven't seen it since and have been curious about it if you've run across it. You could do fun things with freezing to make harder structurers and for radiation shielding, using the skin of the building as a machine like for sewage processing, etc.
@MikMarba2 жыл бұрын
I currently work as an inflatable structure designer. I think that this technology is incredbly underutilised and the opportunities are endless. The only problem is letting people know that this an option! Thats why videos like this are awesome.
@jomynow2 жыл бұрын
My parents didn't like air conditioning, and I used to use a big ole box fan and old encyclopedia sets to secure a very large queen bed sheets to make what I called a moon tent. I'd read and play and sleep in that thing. It was beautiful.
@301terf2 жыл бұрын
I never thought that I had an interest in architecture, but these videos really help introduce me to a completely new perspective on the way I see the cities I live in. Thanks!
@economyofmotion Жыл бұрын
Onya Stewie! I'm a first year historical restauration carpenter apprentice in Melbourne Australia. Love the content, love the clarity, it's a big boost for when I get trapped talking to an architect and my boss is otherwise engaged! You're doing a great job mate many thanks, -Jesse
@skylarking122 жыл бұрын
I lived in the 70's in a Chicago-area suburb called Hanover Park, with the local public swimming pool about 100 yards away from my back door. It was convenient to basically walk from my backyard to the pool in about a hundred steps. The Park District decided one year to go big on inflatable tech for a fieldhouse/tennis court complex as well as to englobe the pool. Both were heated by big gas-fed heaters and the first two winters that pool was gloriously tropical. These gigantic arctic white blisters were locally nicknamed "The Warts" for a while. After a short acclimatization period, to get over the continuous noise of the blowers and the use of airlocks for entry/egress, people enjoyed them quite a lot. But maintenance of the blowers and heaters and rising energy costs for the constant pressure fans began to eat into the parks' budget. In trying to cut costs, they changed the gas supply to the heaters for the pool, without modifying the ignition system, and every time they ignited for a heating cycle, it made a terrifying explosive BOOM sound. Roughly once an hour. Right behind my home. Suddenly the pool was less convenient.... At the end of that season, the district decided to remove the pool bubble, but left the fieldhouse/tennis complex covered. It was braced inside with hemispherical ribs of steel and cables, in a tensegrity-type construction to supplement the blowers, where the air only did half the structural work. It's still in good shape decades later.
@jimurrata67852 жыл бұрын
No mention of the recursive nature of NASA's influence? The Bigelow Aerospace Excursion Module (BEAM) was attached to the ISS in 2016 It may be more pantry or storeroom than architecture but it definitely shows how tough an inflatable structure can be.
@someguy97782 жыл бұрын
In the 80's when I was in Elementary School, there used to be a traveling inflatable planetarium. Looking through Google it appears it still travels to schools. I thought it was the coolest thing ever at that age.
@TorkildKahrs2 жыл бұрын
Happy to see you on Nebula! Can't wait to see what's in store for the channel.
@MSportsEngineering2 жыл бұрын
I've watched as many of your videos and this is my favorite because it exposed me to a new-to-me technology-with a great history. I have worked around composites for the last 10 years and had never heard of a PTFE + fiberglass.
@spiksplinter2 жыл бұрын
The ideas you present are so so appreciated. I've been interested into inflatable robots and seeing the scaled up versions of architecture is inspiring. Some of the projects you showed made me think of the book anarchism and architecture
@Kahsimiah2 жыл бұрын
1:58 looking at the pictures of the inside, you can clearly see that the Kaplan Institute is not an inflatable building in the real sense. It has a conventional 1st floor and a steal beam structure to support it and the 2nd floor. The inflatable part is only the walls/windows in the 2nd floor. Using only inflatable elements, it is just a building with a clever twist.
@johnsmith76762 ай бұрын
"Steal" beam structure" ? Who stole them?
@Kahsimiah2 ай бұрын
@@johnsmith7676 omg you are so funny. I am laughing so hard. I can barely breathe. Seriously, stop. You are too much. I can not take it anymore. Stop being hilarious. You are killing me. Help. Everybody: this man is too funny for the world. Do not listen to him. He is so funny, you will not be able to stop laughing. I mean, look at me. I read his comment and now I am sweating. I need water, please give me water, or I will die. I have never laughed so hard in my life. I hope I will be able to stop laughing one day. I would like to see my family again. But right now, the chances to stop laughing are slim. I have little hope. Please tell my wife I love her.
@Lucidbkeo2 жыл бұрын
Well dang, birdair actually has something in my hometown and I never knew, I always thought it was frosted glass! I've literally been in that Jobsite as they built it but had no clue.
@vizender2 жыл бұрын
Where I grew up in France, there’s something called Le Râdome. It’s a huge inflated sphere (one of the largest inflated structure currently) whose purpose is to protect the first antenna that allowed direct TV transmission between the US and Europe, and it is now a museum. The sphere is a few dozens meters (feet) high, and the materiel is not even a millimeter thick. When you enter the dome, because it’s pressurize, you can really feel the increasing pressure in your ears. And the most impressive thing about this is that to have the entire dome standing high, you really don’t need a pressure much higher than atmospheric pressure. Like just a few millibars over the highest atmospheric pressure is completely sufficient !
@CUBETechie2 жыл бұрын
My question is why we always want rectangular shapes the nature provided so many structures which are extremely material saving and efficient
@rolandmdill2 жыл бұрын
I think this shows how important it is to keep NASA and scientific research in general properly funded. I assume companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin will always try to keep as many of their inventions secret.
@tomythius2 жыл бұрын
You might be interested in the UK's National Space Centre, in Leicester. The "rocket house" is a tower with semi-transparent walls made of inflated pillows of ETFE. Looks crazy and can be seen for miles.
@Dannil1 Жыл бұрын
U r the man Stewart, your work and teaching through this content is 2nd to none, I put your work as not just inspirational but a true teaching aid, look forward to seeing more of your content in stride and maybe some possible projects you are associated with...Chicago is a great city.
@stephenmoerlein84702 жыл бұрын
Interesting description on how technology directs new developments in architecture.
@heberatondo2 жыл бұрын
This is gold, especially after I just watched the episode about collapsible buildings from impractical jokers
@DZstudios.2 жыл бұрын
That thumbnail was awesome
@stewarthicks2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@LDVTennis2 жыл бұрын
What do you want ETFE? What does the ETFE say? What does it like? ... An arch? It's not a brick. A bubble or pillow? Is that all it can be?
@SBKWaffles2 жыл бұрын
To add: there's also the concept of "tensairity" which uses the inflatable elements as structural elements. As an idea it seems to be in its infancy, but is worth mentioning en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tensairity
@carllinden5332 жыл бұрын
1:03 I was just wondering what those things are on your night stands, they're power houses!
@noahwalters27322 жыл бұрын
When your talking about the field of inflatable structures, it wouldn't be complete without mentioning Dometec International, or a similar bulk-storage-facility construction company. Their construction process starts by inflating a balloon with a diameter that can get over 100 meters, and then building inward using the balloon as a exterior frame. The end result might be a concrete structure, but inflatables are great for offering a quick exterior frame you can build off of.
@qilorar2 жыл бұрын
amazing video, so inspiring, it is strange how bubbles can be still so inovative
@henryglennon38642 жыл бұрын
There's another interesting ETFE building in the Centre Flon in Lausanne, Switzerland. It's inflated facade is divided into a triangular grid, and looks pretty sharp.
@RichardLightburn2 жыл бұрын
Good video. Thanks for this and for the channel generally. Ronan himself has pointed to Crown Hall as a model. (Ronan teaches there, as you know.) While Crown Hall is nearly a one room schoolhouse, Kaplan has very few walls for a classroom building. Some points you might also have made: (1) The building us transparent (like Crown Hall). And unlike the Radome and most of your examples of inflatables, this visual transparency is key. More, this transparency can be modulated by changing the level of inflation. That's what makes it so groundbreaking. (2) it's a dynamic façade: I know of various attempts at making a dynamic façades, but these all quickly failed, probably because they had many moving parts, and so had many ways of being broken. (This has a rather smaller number of parts, so I'll give it a much much higher chance of having a long lifetime. But dynamic façades have such a miserable record that I'll place no bets.)
@pilargallegosdanza2 жыл бұрын
This topic is super interesting. Amazing work Stewart. Thanks for making these videos!
@Guchtelspaten2 жыл бұрын
You should really check out the work of Hans Walter Müller, one of the pioneers of inflatable architecture! Especially his own house outside Paris, where you can really see the potential not only for grand utopian ideas but for everyday life
@stewarthicks2 жыл бұрын
Great reference!
@sjberntson76062 жыл бұрын
That hop on the bed was low key hella impressive
@rosemarymcbride3419 Жыл бұрын
One of the coolest inflatable structures I ever experienced was when I participated in the fabrication and inflation of a giant balloon made from plastic shopping bags for the Argentine artist Tomas Saraceno
@sciencerscientifico3102 жыл бұрын
Inflatable tents offer the advantage of being lightweight and able to be packed in a small space while they are transported, making them attractive for first generation space colonies.
@wvuvino212 жыл бұрын
Dang brand deals!!!!, I thought you were going to say you were working on your Nollie Tre flip
@AntneeUK2 жыл бұрын
BRB building an inflatable dome over my house. I love this!
@4OHz2 жыл бұрын
As always, thanks Stewart.
@Nisfornarwhal19902 жыл бұрын
Ive noticed that when you enter the frame in a silly way you spend about two or three seconds trying not to laugh 😂
@qo7902 жыл бұрын
Have a look at the Alianz Arena in Munich it’s a huge stadium, wich uses inflated pillows as the outside material. They are also illuminated.
@FAB11502 жыл бұрын
As a kid it always fascinated me when I entered an enclosed tennis/volleyball/soccer field that used inflatable structures, we have quite a bit here. One thing that I've never understood is how they stay up when the blowers are off. They're able to do so for extremely long periods of time, even with the doors open (as the commercial hinted). It's probably because of the extremely big volume of air they contain, but it still wonders me! What about blackouts or power outages?
@benjaminstevens44682 жыл бұрын
The first inflatable building I remember being in was over a hotel pool in December. Not counting bounce houses.
@dennyhaxhnikaj2 жыл бұрын
Thank you professor for those great videos, they are of great use to all of us architects.
@BlackFoxInc2 жыл бұрын
Well done! Well done!
@thewingedpotato64632 жыл бұрын
Putting a giant dome over Manhattan is still a great idea, just as long as it's airtight and they don't include any exits.
@wisteela2 жыл бұрын
I was hoping you'd mention the inflatable tennis court covers being the inspiration for bouncy castles. I'd be exactly likely those employees on those barrage balloons.
@EditioCastigata2 жыл бұрын
One step up from this, from load on inflated structures to flow bolstering strength, are “active support structures.”
@TackerTacker2 жыл бұрын
You think we would have bouncy castles today if a private company like SpaceX made these inventions back then instead of NASA?
@metricstormtrooper2 жыл бұрын
My government here in Tasmania Australia has put a huge amount of regulations and red tape to stop Owner Builders, thus putting the creation of buildings out of the hands of the People and profits into the hands of their builder mates. Walter Bird aged badly and didn't live very long. just before last Christmas in a tiny city in the north of our state, Six School children were killed when an inflatable play structure (jumping castle here in Australia) was blown into the air, one of the saddest Christmases ever in the state.
@arasharfa Жыл бұрын
my favorite example of inflatable architecture is Kengo Kuma's teahouse. Please look it up if you haven't seen it!
@daviddodds302 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the new video. This reminds me of a conversation I had with a professor in college who had just built his new house. He had torn down a handsome 1930s brick bungalow, sending it to the trash heap, and replaced it with a red corrugated structure that was made of the cheapest materials he could find. Not to be morbid, I asked him “what is to be done with your house after you’ve moved away or passed away? Should it also be sent to the refuse pile?” His face turned white. Permanence and reusability, it seems, has been diminishing since the very beginning of time. We can look at the structures in Iraq or Egypt or China and still make out their forms. In Rome, it is the same. What great benefit is a structure built of air and disposable materials if it replaces something more permanent? To quote a different professor, “sometimes different is just different,” but to alter the meaning a little, sometimes different for different-sake is a waste of materials. At Texas Tech in the early 2000s, our architecture dean replied, when asked, “If you wanted to learn sustainable architecture, you should have gone to UT Austin. We don’t teach that here.” Maybe I’ve completely misunderstood the definition of sustainability, but to me, it means that not only is the carbon footprint lowered during construction, but the structure is also long lasting and able to be repurposed in the future to give it new life. After all, it is THAT ability that truly makes a structure able to reduce its carbon footprint, not the ability to simply throw it away.
@daviddodds302 жыл бұрын
As an example, let us look at Dallas Fair Park, a collection of Art Deco structures built for the 1936 World’s Fair/Texas Centennial. The buildings, though remarkable in design, were made of materials not meant to last the test of time. They were built to be inexpensive and temporary, but their historical significance and designs endeared them to the community. As a result, the City of Dallas spends millions of dollars every year simply attempting to keep the buildings from crumbling to the ground. Going on 86 years later, we can see that it would have been much more cost effective to have built the structures at Dallas Fair Park/The State Fair of Texas from more durable materials.
@RichardArpin2 жыл бұрын
Very thought provoking comment. I'm on the construction end of things, having spent the last decade in concrete, but in my Construction Management program I've been studying mass timber as a building material, and have seen a move towards wooden structures generally. While there are certain benefits, I too will wonder how long they will last. My apartment, a semi-brutalist concrete tower looks just as nice as anything made lately, but is 50 years old and half the price for rent (although the floorplan is smaller in size too). Maybe I should be looking at researching low carbon footprint concrete's or carbon storing concretes; I know the concrete industry has been pushing against mass timber with them (alongside 3d printing concrete homes), so maybe they're worth checking out.
@RichardLightburn2 жыл бұрын
We can look at SOME of the structures that were built in Egypt, but most were no more permanent than contemporary structures
@jackiepie74232 жыл бұрын
10:56 that bubble looks like it's only good for catching covid
@radudeATL2 жыл бұрын
What is that magnificent building at 7:18?
@aeroaa22 жыл бұрын
Grande Arche de la Defense, its located in Paris
@ARedMagicMarker2 жыл бұрын
So are these things safe from one really good hurricane season?
@thebigb12862 жыл бұрын
I miss bouncy houses now! I know I'm an adult, but i love them!!
@maximt.45862 жыл бұрын
thanks for your videos, they teached me so much about interessting aspects of architecture, i never would have heard about otherwise :)
@iPodnanoManInSweden2 жыл бұрын
What is the time span "1912-1926" refering to at 4:26 regarding Walter Bird?
@KelsomaticPDX2 жыл бұрын
I was also confused so I did a little digging: He was born in 1912 and died in 2006. Seems to be a typo!
@RichardArpin2 жыл бұрын
I'm now dreaming of having an inflatable over an outdoor pool here in Winnipeg. Meanwhile we're about to get snow near the start of May...
@Stammer62 жыл бұрын
I wish I were still in school. I'd love to have the resources to try stuff with inflatable support. Imagine using an inflatable dome to act as formwork for concrete, and then maintain that dome after it cures just for its insulating properties.
@ray-tobey2 жыл бұрын
The Binishell and Monolithic Dome techniques are fascinating. I'm tempted to build my dream home with them!
@arneernst25142 жыл бұрын
4:24 Walter bird did of course not die 14 years after being born. He died in April of 2006. (In the video it says 1912 - 1926)
@dukeradwardthe5th8432 жыл бұрын
11:05 our Biology teachers keep hammering hone the point that the term "semi-permeable membrane" makes no sense, since the membrane is either permeable or it isn't. In the biological sense "selectively permeable membrane" is the more correct term, since there is a selection of things that can permeate through.
@dbe_manny2 жыл бұрын
A person sized door is semi-permeable in that it could fit a person, but not something huge like a car. It's not selectively permeable though because other stuff can go through it too, like a cat or a fire. Semi-permeable membranes are the same way. They might block huge molecules like glucose, but any smaller molecule like water, ions, CO2, etc has free reign with no filter. There are selectively permeable things though. Like a sodium-potassium pump.
@KlaudiusL2 жыл бұрын
8:36 would be nice if you make a video about life, work, philosofy and legacy of the Master Buckminster Fuller.
@chuckandmax73132 жыл бұрын
My father invented the inflatable MASH unit for the national guard , this made it much easier to set up a unit than the wooden constructed unit.
@bedrockbuilders21962 жыл бұрын
Thanks for another awesome video
@salkjshaweoiuenvohvr2 жыл бұрын
PLEASE look into the monolithic dome institute.
@morebetter79012 жыл бұрын
good quality content... and congratulation for your achievements. The only critique I have is the complete absence of insight in the actual material and the position that dupont put us in (environmentally and health wise) which would explain why teflon isn't just a joy ride we should all enjoy. Perhaps some research is required... I know there's a doco/movie about the whistle blower that started to unveil the teflon origin story... "dark waters" 2019 with mark ruffalo.
@LaVacheDigue2 жыл бұрын
Look up Dante Bini. He uses inflatables as formwork for concrete structures. There are some amazing structures possible by it.
@---Snaporaz---2 жыл бұрын
Dante Bini was one of the first to try and to patent the technique of using inflatable structure as a support for concrete
@Lutivos2 жыл бұрын
That picture at 0:19 looks very similar to Arcade Mall in Bridgeport, CT
@Juno_FM2 жыл бұрын
This was a cool video, my school is literally right next to IIT.
@austinduvall24222 жыл бұрын
uh idk if you realize but since the 1980s the underground coal mines have used an inflatable shelter for emergencies. it comes in a steel container and in event of a collapse or fire or other event which would cause you to be unable to leave the mine you would roll out the shelter and allow it to inflate then crawl inside the oxygen is estimated to last for 96 hours when at max capacity.
@youmeandeveryone58932 жыл бұрын
What's about air circulation and heat and oxygen control inside inflatable structures? How pumps could hold the building while door open? What Math?
@michaelfurness80502 жыл бұрын
Southern cross station in Melbourne Victoria has a inflatable roof to allow sunlight in and in the event of a fire is designed to pop and in the heat shrink away to allow the smoke to escape the semi enclosed space.
@mgetommy2 жыл бұрын
I love the bubbles
@ebearscanada13022 жыл бұрын
your a great teacher even for me , a high school drop out...
@rangerrossnnn82 Жыл бұрын
YOU FORGOT those inflatable space dome planetarium shows, and those military inflatable structures that are impregnated with cement that harden after inflating then washing the structure with water then curing the structure to a permanent shape and more durability and permanency
@mugglepower2 жыл бұрын
I kinda like it. Looks kinda flimsy but replacing the entire thing also seem much easier. And even if the house gets wiped out no falling bricks to bury me ten feet under...Which oddly is one of my deepest fears.
@AFTERPROWRESTLING Жыл бұрын
You'd just suffocate in the pvc
@EdgyNumber12 жыл бұрын
I do like the ETFE roof at New Street train station in Birmingham, UK.
@kevcal72 жыл бұрын
Terrific!
@matthewsallman17002 жыл бұрын
Surprised you didn't talk more of inflatable sports stadiums such as the Hoosier Dome and Silverdome, both had short lives. The Detroit area had roof collapses at both the Silverdome and more recently at the Lexus Velodrome. Perhaps more such buildings need a better roofing material to be developed, or they are impractical for colder environments.
@sheiladesmond35262 жыл бұрын
this channel is bomb!!!......my subscription to this channel isn't a waste
@odefication2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for an interesting and inspiring video! I remember designing an inflatable structure for a second year course in architecture school. Inflatables are so nice and playful somehow 😀 Too bad using plastic as a construction material isn’t the most environmentally friendly thing to do in 2022…
@JoshMiller32 жыл бұрын
New subscriber here. Loved this video. Fascinating!
@CJ2by42 жыл бұрын
6:29 hey I live right near that soccer field. Kool
@scpatl4now2 жыл бұрын
Fun fact...Tang is really great for cleaning your dishwasher. Pour some tang into the detergent cup and some into the dishwasher. Run a full cycle and you have a sparkling clean dishwasher! If you drink it...it's kinda nasty, so clean with it!
@saynotop2w2 жыл бұрын
Doesn't baking soda do the same but cost cheaper
@scpatl4now2 жыл бұрын
@@saynotop2w Baking soda isn't as alkaline as soda ash, but if you have baking soda, you can bake it in cookie sheet at 350F for an hour and it will covert to soda ash.
@adailydrawingmustache46042 жыл бұрын
Early but I can tell this is going to be good
@rikidog2682 Жыл бұрын
"Style is a trap." -Renzo Piano
@gargantuaism Жыл бұрын
Reminds me of the ZANNAZONE. Anybody remember that ? From around 1970 in Los Angeles. Weird rooms of color and effects all in an inflatable building. Or did I just dream it?
@MrPaxio2 жыл бұрын
damn walter bird looks very old for a 14 year old. 9:00 back in the good ol days when hippies loved plastic. save the trees burn the dinos moment
@whatscooking30502 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@GoingtoHecq2 жыл бұрын
The dreams of technologists are always silly and impractical. Really looks like supervillain stuff. However I can totally see why you would want a totally enclosed city in the arctic or antarctic. I don't know that an inflatable will solve those problems though. I like the giant inner tube they made for space though. It would be like living inside of a tire. I also question the use of the inflatable cap around that building. It seems to me that a system that requires constant input of air is bound to fail at some point. I would like to confirm that it overall saves the building on energy costs. Is there no equally practical static system though?
@RichardArpin2 жыл бұрын
It seems that the technology building that he visits early does provide a level of insulation from weather though. I've often wondered about how to enclose a part of the city during the winter, and seasonal inflatables over courtyards or squares makes more sense than opening glass over all outdoor spaces (my original vision)