Knitting Architecture Be Smart about Building Concrete Structures

[Music]

so it’s 2019 and we’re all

very much aware of the fact that climate

change is a serious issue

now if i were to ask everyone in this

room to tell me what we should do

to be more sustainable we’d come up with

the first things

such as using less fossil fuels

flying less maybe driving an electric

car

maybe changing our diets bringing our

bags to the supermarket

using less plastic and recycling and all

of those are valid and good

but there is one sector we almost always

overlook

and this sector in 2017 accounted for

almost

40 percent of the global greenhouse gas

emissions

can anyone think of what this is

it’s the building and construction

industry

and this is not going to get any better

in the future because by 2050 there will

be 2.1 billion people

more on the planet so whether we like it

or not

we’re going to have to build housing and

infrastructure for them

and if we do things the way we do today

we’re going to be faced with

more pollution resource depletion and a

whole lot of waste

so at the block research group at eth

zurich

we develop methods to build and design

build buildings better by intelligently

including

structural performance in architectural

geometry

we can really reduce the amount of

material that you need for a structure

and i can explain that easily using this

piece of paper that i carried in here

so when it’s flat it can barely hold its

own weight

but if we change the geometry and

introduce a little bit of curvature

it can suddenly hold a lot more and the

amount of material has definitely not

changed

now it’s the same principle that allows

that pringle to hold a full glass of

water

and please try this at home also

it’s the same principle that allows for

this structure behind me to span

40 meters with only six centimeters of

concrete

so if we do use structural geometry

intelligently we can

design beautiful structures that use

very little material

but there’s a catch their geometries are

usually complex

and intricate non-repetitive and that

means they can be very challenging to

build

using traditional techniques now

concrete

is the most used material not only here

in bucharest but the world

so it’s also a favorite material when it

comes to these kind of geometries

simply put because it’s liquid stone so

we can mold it into whatever shape we

want if we have a formwork

and the formwork is the catch if we look

at how things are being built today

unfortunately we find a system that has

remained unchanged for hundreds of years

this is roughly the 1960s and while

we’ve gotten better and more precise and

more streamlined

in our manufacturing process the basic

principle stays the same

we need months of milling or carpentry

to produce these heavy

clunky molds that need a lot of support

and ultimately turn into a pile of waste

so really if we want to unlock the full

potential of these kind of

efficient and optimized structures what

we really need to do is not only change

the way that we

design things but we also have to change

the way that we build things

in terms of formwork one solution of

many would be to use a textile

a textile is a lot lighter than wood

it needs a lot less support and finally

it’s also

more sustainable it produces a lot less

waste

my research specifically looks at how we

could use knitted textiles as formwork

for concrete

and knitting is very special in the

sense that we can create

3d geometries directly in a single

process using existing machinery

and we can also make sure that we have

very precise

local material properties or integrated

features

and if it sounds confusing i’ll have you

think of your shoes

your sports shoes all do all of these

things and you’re very familiar with

them

so how this works is we start off with a

design

and then produce a fitting knitted

textile

we then tension that textile into shape

and because textiles and especially

knitted textiles are actually quite soft

so you wouldn’t be able to hold their

shapes when casting

we just coat them with a very thin

special cement paste

to make them strong enough this leads us

to a nice lightweight

structure that can be now used as a

formwork for concrete

one of the tricky parts here was

designing or coming up with a

computational pipeline that allows us to

automatically translate

a 3d design into manufacturing

possibilities for a knitting machine for

existing machinery

so let me show you some examples of

course just because we start off and we

say hey you know knitting could work

that doesn’t mean

everybody believes it so i started off

with this knitting machine which is

something that people in the 90s may

have had in their homes

and we lovingly called her grandma

of course because she’s the ancestor so

we did a bridge

the first bridge we did was a small

structure something about as big as the

circle i’m standing on today

but it was important to be able to test

this kind of principle

it weighed only 200 kilos but the

interesting part about it was that how

much the formwork weighed which was

about one kilo in itself

so the way this worked or the way we

tried out was we started with a textile

that we tensioned using some splines and

ribbons into a corrugated shape

we coated it with the cement paste i

mentioned earlier and then we used it to

cast concrete into normally

if we look at the textile itself you’ll

notice that it has already some channels

in which we could introduce these bars

these black

gfrp rods and cables to get to the shape

and we also had some registry points so

that we would know that we get the right

thickness of concrete

to produce it we used grandma

it took about a week in this very

automated and not manual process as you

can see robots were not yet coming for

our jobs

to produce this very small textile in

three pieces because the width of the

machine was also limited

now what is very interesting about it is

that it is very light so the textile

itself was only 433 grams

in total we put all of the pieces

together into one single piece

introduced all of the splines and

shaping elements so that we could get

a corrugated shape in the end that

flattened piece of textile was then

fixed into a rig

tensioned and gotten to this shape we

took this lovely little bridge into a

climate chamber and applied this

thin cement based coating i was telling

you about

to get a shape that looks something like

this and weighs only 12 kilos

now this was one millimeter thick and it

could

just support another four millimeters of

concrete that we sprayed onto it

those four millimeters together with the

formwork from before became the formwork

for casting concrete normally

so we didn’t change anything about how

we cast the concrete inside

the structure that came out may be small

but what it said about this kind of

technique

was that we can really create a very

have a rather heavy structure with

a significantly lighter mold also

we didn’t need support from underneath

so you could use such a

technique to be able to build in places

where you want to have an

unobstructed passage say over highway or

over a river

and of course because we’re researchers

what we also needed to do we were eager

to load

test it dynamically and in a very

scientific way so we jumped on it

now to the right to my left in the

picture is lex and lex is the researcher

that works on making sure that the

composition of the cement paste is

exactly right so that it is strong

enough to do these kind of things

so he’s our in-house concrete magician

what the project also showed us is that

the textile could possibly be used also

in other ways

i mean it wasn’t coated on one side so

it remained visible

and we leave it in place so it kind of

brings an avenue of doing something

architecturally and aesthetically with

something that is previously just meant

for structure now those experiments were

done with grandma

and you might say hey yeah that’s a

great idea

but in construction we need to do things

that are a lot bigger

and spending a week on this two meter

thing is also not exactly ideal

so we left grandma aside because those

experiments were convincing enough

to get an upgrade to a proper industrial

machine to see that this actually works

at an architectural scale so last year

in october we built a structure to test

these things out it was called nit

candela and it was built in mexico city

it was done in collaboration with

zahadid code group

and it is designed as a homage to the

famous shell builder felix candela

it looked something like this and what

you already see is that it has a

concrete outside and

something interesting on the inside

which is a textile

it weighed five tons of concrete in

total so we went a long way from the

200 kilos and it was built using a cable

net

as a main load-bearing structure and a

knitted textile

that weighed only 25 kilos in total the

cable net and the textile

were 55 kilos and they carried five tons

so that’s quite impressive to do this

what we did was we

made a frame we tensioned the textile

into the frame using those cables that i

talked about

but the interesting part here is just as

with the bridge is that the textile

itself had all of the channels to guide

those cables where they needed to be

guided and another

nifty feature it had pockets so that we

could insert inflatables

when inflated those pockets would create

cavities in the concrete

saving weight what we then did is we

coated it with a very thin cement paste

with a slightly different formulation

because we needed

to use it outside and when that hardened

we coated it with concrete

when the concrete hardens the frame can

be removed and reused for other things

and we’re left with a structure as

before the textile is left inside of the

structure and it’s what you see on the

inside it’s this beautiful aesthetic

thing

so in conclusion the textile that we

used had

two sides a beautiful aesthetic exterior

that needed to be seen

and a technical other side that needed

to fulfill all the functions of guiding

the cables and where all of these

inflatables needed to be and for us to

register the geometry

even though they are two very different

sides they have

they use two different materials and

they behave very differently

they are produced on the machine in one

single process

now of course the machine also has a

limitation in its width

it’s not long enough so we did have to

split the 4 meter geometry into four

parts but when we were done

we created what is arguably the world’s

largest scarf

and we packed that up in four pieces

and put it in our suitcases and took it

in checked in luggage to mexico

well this is first to show that we can

do this very lightly but also as

architects we finish everything the

night before the deadline

so when we get to mexico we put

everything together

we introduced all the cables where they

needed to be and we stretched it in the

frame

we also were very relieved to see that

it does stretch to the size that we

wanted because it looked incredibly

small beforehand

and that means that our pipeline and our

and our whole system

does work at least until this point so

far

and what you can also notice is how

little support it has

otherwise you would need a whole lot of

support to create this geometry

we then coated it with that thin cement

paste layer which was now misted on

as a spray and we were left with this

beautiful swiss chocolate of a texture

on one side

now i just wanted to remind you that

those little boxes that you see there of

the swiss

chocolate there are actually cavities in

the concrete later on

making sure that we don’t have as much

weight otherwise in the structure

we then had very artful craftsmen

which are concrete workers in mexico

that put three layers of concrete onto

this surface in the most traditional

fashion

and made sure that it had an incredibly

incredibly smooth finish

which is absolutely mind-blowing to see

that you get

a concrete finish that probably felix

candela would have also been proud of

so the finished structure has a hard

concrete outside

and a soft textile inside what you don’t

see on this picture

is that the textile is actually soft you

could lean against it

push and it’s soft because there are

cavities behind it

and depending on how the sun would shine

every now and then you could also get a

glimpse of the skeletons of little

balloons that were in there

so i just wanted to leave you with a few

thoughts about a process or a structure

like this

the formwork for this was 50 square

meters

and the cable net and textile so

excluding that frame that can be reused

only cost

2 200 euros it took

it was 25 kilos of weight that the

textile had

and we took it there in a checked

luggage it took a mere

36 hours to knit a surface area that

would have taken about 750 hours to mill

otherwise

and the entire project from the very

first time we sat at a table for design

to the structure standing there was

three and a half months

that would have been impossible with

traditional techniques because those 750

hours i mentioned earlier

that’s about three months of milling

alone so that would have been just the

formwork

now finally the really interesting part

is that those machines that i’m talking

about

they are there are hundreds of them in

factories such as these

all over the world so really we don’t

actually have to take the textile

anywhere though it’s light and all that

we can just send them the data and have

them manufactured locally

moreover these types of feats of

economy and productivity are incredibly

important for the construction sector

that is lagging behind other industries

and the productivity

is at the moment the same as it was 20

years ago

lagging behind average and definitely a

lot lower than what manufacturing can do

so considering that in the next 30 years

we would have to build

the entire amount of construction that

we have today

bill gates earlier this year likened

that to adding a new york

every month for the next 30 years it’s

not

that we can build less but we should

definitely be smarter

about how we build and design those

buildings

thank you

you

[音乐

] 现在是 2019 年,我们都

非常清楚气候

变化现在是一个严重的问题

第一件事,

例如使用更少的化石燃料,

减少飞行,也许驾驶电动

汽车,

也许改变我们的饮食,将我们的

袋子带到超市

使用更少的塑料和回收,

所有这些都是有效和好的,

但有一个领域我们几乎总是

忽视

和 该行业在 2017 年

占全球温室气体

排放量的

近 40

% 在这个星球上,所以无论我们喜不喜欢,

我们都必须为他们建造住房和

基础设施

,如果我们以今天的方式做事,

我们将面临

更多的污染资源 耗竭

和大量浪费,

因此在苏黎世联邦理工学院的街区研究小组中,

我们

通过智能地

结构性能纳入建筑

几何学中来开发建造和设计建筑的方法,

我们可以真正减少

结构所需的材料数量,

并且我 可以解释一下,

使用我在这里携带的这张纸很容易,

所以当它是平的时,它几乎不能

承受自己的重量,

但是如果我们改变几何形状并

引入一点曲率,

它可以突然容纳更多和

材料的数量 现在绝对没有

改变

它是相同的原理,

允许 pringle 容纳一整杯水

,请在家里尝试这个

也是相同的原理,允许

我身后的这个结构跨越

40 米,只有 6 厘米的

混凝土,

所以如果 我们确实巧妙地使用了结构几何

我们可以

设计出漂亮的结构,只使用

很少的材料,

但它们的几何形状有一个问题

通常是复杂

且错综复杂的非重复性,这

意味着使用传统技术建造它们可能非常具有挑战性

简单地说,因为它是液态石头,所以

如果我们有

模板,我们可以将它塑造成我们想要的任何形状,如果我们

看看今天的建筑是如何建造的,那么模板就是关键,

不幸的是,我们发现了一个

数百年来保持不变的系统

这大约是 1960 年代,虽然

我们在制造过程中变得更好、更精确、

更精简

,但基本

原理保持不变,

我们需要数月的铣削或木工

来生产

这些需要大量支撑

并最终转动的笨重的模具 变成一堆废物,

所以如果我们想释放

这些

高效和优化结构的全部潜力,

我们真正需要的是 我们要做的不仅是改变

我们设计事物的方式,

而且我们还必须改变

我们

在模板方面建造事物的方式,其中一种

解决方案是使用

纺织品 纺织品比木材轻很多

它需要 少得多的支持,最后

它也

更可持续,它产生的废物少得多

我的研究特别关注我们

如何使用针织纺织品作为混凝土模板

,针织非常特别,

因为我们可以

在一个单一的

过程中直接使用 现有的机器

,我们还可以确保我们具有

非常精确的

本地材料特性或综合

特征

所以这是如何工作的,我们从设计开始

,然后生产合适的针织

纺织品

,然后将纺织品拉紧成型

,因为纺织品,尤其是

针织纺织品 实际上非常柔软,

因此在浇铸时您将无法保持它们的

形状

我们只需在它们上涂上一层非常薄的

特殊水泥浆

以使其足够坚固,这使我们

得到了一个很好的轻质

结构,现在可以

用作混凝土模板

这里的一个棘手部分是

设计或提出一个

计算管道,它使我们能够

自动

将 3d 设计转化

为制造现有机器的针织机的可能性,

所以让我向您展示一些示例

当然只是因为我们开始了,我们

说嘿,你知道针织可以工作

,但这并不意味着

每个人都相信,所以我

从这台针织机开始,这

是 90 年代人们可能

在家中拥有的东西

,我们当然亲切地称她为

奶奶,因为她是祖先,所以

我们做了一座

桥 我们做的第一座桥是一个很小的

结构,大约和我今天站在的圆圈一样大,

但能够做到这一点很重要 o 测试

这种原理,

它的重量只有 200 公斤,但

有趣的是

,模板

本身的重量约为 1 公斤,

所以它的工作方式或我们

尝试的方式是我们从我们的

纺织品开始 使用一些样条线和

带子将其拉紧成波纹状,

我们在上面涂上我之前提到的水泥浆

,然后我们用它

来正常浇注混凝土,

如果我们看看纺织品本身,你会

注意到它已经有一些

通道,我们 可以引入这些杆

这些黑色

gfrp 杆和电缆以达到形状

,我们也有一些注册点,

这样我们就知道我们得到了合适

的混凝土厚度

来生产它我们使用奶奶

在这个非常自动化的过程中花了大约一周的时间

而不是手动过程,如您

所见,机器人还没有来

我们的工作

来生产这种非常小的

三件纺织品,因为机器的宽度

现在也受到了限制 值得一提的

是它很轻,所以纺织品

本身总共只有 433

克,我们将所有

部件放在一起,并

引入了所有的花键和

成型元件,这样我们最终可以得到

一个波纹形状

然后将扁平的织物

固定在一个

拉紧的钻机中并形成这种形状 我们

将这个可爱的小桥放入

气候室

并涂上一层薄薄的水泥基涂层

12 公斤,

现在是 1 毫米厚,它

可以支撑另外 4 毫米的

混凝土,我们在上面喷涂了

这 4 毫米的

模板和以前的模板一起成为了

正常浇注混凝土的模板,

所以我们没有改变任何

浇注方式 出来的结构内部的混凝土

可能很小,

但它所说的这种

技术

是我们真的可以创造一个非常

有RA 更重的结构

和更轻的模具,

我们也不需要从下面支撑,

所以你可以使用这种

技术来建造

你想要

通畅通道的地方,比如高速公路

或河流

,当然因为 我们是研究人员

我们还需要做的事情 我们渴望

以一种非常科学的方式动态地对其进行负载测试

所以我们

现在跳到图片中我左边的右边

是 lex 而 lex 是研究

人员 确保

水泥浆的成分

完全正确,因此它足够坚固

,可以做这些事情,

所以他是我们内部的混凝土

魔术师,该项目还向我们展示了这种

纺织品也可以

用于其他

方面 意味着它的一侧没有涂层,因此

它仍然可见

,我们将其留在原处,因此它

带来了一种在

建筑和美学上使用

以前仅

用于结构的东西的途径 现在这些实验是

和奶奶一起做的

,你可能会说,嘿,是的,这是个

好主意,

但在施工中,我们需要做

更大的事情,

在这个两米的东西上花一周时间

也不太理想,

所以我们把奶奶放在一边 因为这些

实验足够令人信服

,可以升级到合适的工业

机器,看看这实际上

在建筑规模上是有效的,所以

去年 10 月,我们建造了一个结构来测试

这些东西,它被称为 nit

candela,它是在墨西哥建造的 city

它是与 zahadid 代码组合作完成的

,它的设计是为了向

著名的贝壳制造商 felix candela 致敬。

纺织品

它总共重达 5 吨混凝土,

所以我们从 200 公斤的重量中走了很长一段路

,它是使用索

作为主要承重结构和

kn 建造的 itted 纺织品

总共仅重 25 公斤

电缆网和纺织品

重 55 公斤,它们承载了 5 吨,

所以这样做非常令人印象深刻

我们所做的是我们

制作了一个框架 我们

使用我使用的那些电缆将纺织品拉紧到框架中

讨论过,

但这里有趣的部分

就像桥一样,织物

本身有所有的通道来引导

那些需要引导的电缆

,另一个

漂亮的特点是它有口袋,这样我们

就可以

在给这些口袋充气时插入充气物 会

在混凝土中产生空洞以

减轻重量我们当时所做的是我们

用一种非常薄的水泥浆

涂上一层稍微不同的配方,

因为我们需要

在外面使用它,当混凝土硬化时,

我们用混凝土涂上

混凝土,框架可以

被移除并重新用于其他东西

,我们留下了一个结构,就像

在纺织品留在结构内部之前一样

,这就是你在里面看到

的 一面是美丽的美学,

所以总而言之,我们使用的纺织品

两个侧面,一个需要看到的美丽美学外观

和一个技术性的另一面,

需要完成

引导电缆的所有功能以及所有这些

充气设备需要的地方 对我们来说,

即使它们是两个非常不同的

侧面,它们也可以注册几何形状,

它们使用两种不同的材料并且

它们的行为非常不同,

它们是在一个过程中在机器上生产的

,当然,机器

的宽度也有限制

这还不够长,所以我们不得不

将 4 米的几何形状分成四

部分,但当我们完成后,

我们创造了可以说是世界上

最大的围巾

,我们将它打包成四块

,放入手提箱

并托运 带着行李去墨西哥,

这是第一次表明我们可以

轻而易举地做到这一点,而且作为

建筑师,我们

在截止日期前一天晚上完成了所有工作,

所以 wh 然后我们到了墨西哥,我们把

所有东西放在一起,

我们把所有的电缆放在他们

需要的地方,我们把它拉到

框架里

我们也很欣慰地看到

它确实拉到了我们想要的尺寸,

因为它事先看起来非常

小,

而且 这意味着到目前为止,我们的管道

和我们的整个系统

至少在这一点之前确实可以工作,

您还可以注意到

它的支持是多么的少,

否则您将需要大量的

支持来创建这个几何体

,然后我们用它涂上它 那个薄薄的水

泥浆层现在被

雾化为喷雾,我们在一侧留下了这种

美丽的瑞士巧克力,

现在我只想提醒你

,你在那里看到

的那些瑞士

巧克力的小盒子实际上是

混凝土中的空腔后来

确保我们没有那么多的

重量,否则在结构中

我们有非常巧妙的工匠

,他们是墨西哥的混凝土工人,

他们把 thre

以最传统的方式在这个表面上铺上一层混凝土,

并确保它具有令人

难以置信的光滑表面

看到你得到

一个可能费利克斯

坎德拉也会引以为豪的混凝土表面,这绝对是令人兴奋的,

所以完成了 结构外面有坚硬的

混凝土

,里面有柔软的纺织品 你

在这张照片上看不到的

是,纺织品实际上是柔软的,你

可以靠在它上面

推,它很柔软,因为

它后面有空洞,

这取决于阳光的照射方式

时不时你还可以

瞥见里面的小气球的骨架,

所以我只是想给你一些

关于这样的过程或结构的想法,

这个模板是 50 平方米

,电缆 网和纺织品,因此

不包括可以重复使用的框架

仅花费

2 200 欧元

,纺织品的重量为 25 公斤

,我们将它放在托运

行李中 e

编织一个表面区域只需要 36 个小时,

否则需要大约 750 个小时来铣削

,整个项目从

我们第一次坐在桌子旁进行设计

到站在那里的结构用了

三个

半月 使用传统技术是不可能的,

因为

我之前

提到的那些 750 小时仅是铣削大约三个月,

所以现在这只是

模板,

最后真正有趣的部分

是我所说的那些机器

有数百个 它们在

世界各地的工厂中,所以实际上我们

实际上不必将纺织品带到

任何地方,尽管它很轻,

我们可以将数据发送给他们并让

它们在当地生产,

此外这些类型的

经济壮举和 生产力对于

落后于其他行业的建筑行业非常重要

目前的生产力与 20 年相同

耳朵以前

落后于平均水平,而且肯定

比制造业可以做到的要低很多

,考虑到在未来 30 年

我们将不得不建造

我们今天拥有的全部建筑,

今年早些时候比尔·盖茨将这

比作每增加一个纽约

下一个 30 年的一个月,

并不是

说我们可以建造更少,但我们

绝对应该更聪明地

了解我们如何建造和设计这些

建筑,

谢谢