burning man 2009
Burning Man is weighing heavily on my mind. Can't make it this year, and I am absolutely gutted.
Some crackers from last year, taken by Jon: (http://www.flickr.com/photos/jonandesign/sets/72157622206473089/)
Burning Man is weighing heavily on my mind. Can't make it this year, and I am absolutely gutted.
Some crackers from last year, taken by Jon: (http://www.flickr.com/photos/jonandesign/sets/72157622206473089/)
Following on from preparation and initial mincing, the next things to decide on where how to create the chicken wire skeleton, and how the blocks would be attached to the substrate given the extra complication of a white sheet in between the two.
Chicken wire will be great as a skeleton, as it's relatively easy to shape, but can still be nice and sturdy if you need it to be. The mesh structure will be really useful for anchoring it into the ground, and attaching the coverings, too. However, it only bends nicely around one axis at a time, as it barely compresses or expands as a sheet at all. That means making cylinders of chicken wire and expecting to be able to stack and bend them into a dome is not going to work.
What I'll do instead is to cut 16 equally sized isosceles triangles, chain the bases (b) together into a loop, then stitch neighboring long sides (l) together, eventually joining all the acute vertices at the top of the dome.
It's pretty likely this won't hold its own weight particularly well, so I may need a single vertical pole in the middle of the dome.
The polystyrene blocks must be secure (because of the wind), quick to put on, and easy to take off. And as the polystyrene itself is awkward to work with, I'll do as much of the hard work as possible before leaving for Nevada. The best solution seems to be to attach the blocks onto strips of white fabric, measured to fit around the igloo in courses. These strips will be useful in keeping everything together during transport, and make it super easy to attach and detach the blocks once on the playa.
I wasn't sure about how to permanently bind polystyrene onto fabric; I wasn't sure until I found This to That. Hot glue!
As for attaching the fabric strips to the sheet and chicken wire underneath, I'm not sure. However, I do know that it's a much easier problem to solve than dealing with the blocks.
Next up: trying to make custom blocks of polystyrene, working out how much chicken wire I need, finding suppliers and finally the pre-build prep work!
Burning man is only 6 weeks away, and my highfalutin plans to build a polystyrene igloo on the playa are looking ambitious at best. So, fueled by some Arctic architecture brainstorming with my sister, this weekend I began making plans for how I can make this work.
SizeI got really inspired by this old 1940s Canadian public information film about traditional Inuit igloo building (video doesn't work in the UK, unfortunately...). I'd assumed igloos were built much like houses, with interlocking blocks going on top of others in courses. In fact, it turns out that the best construction method is to spiral upwards, round and round from bottom to top, so there's effectively only one course of blocks which loops round on top of itself. This means you never have that awkward first block in a course which would have nothing to butt up against. By spiralling up, you always have a block below and a block to the side to nestle up to (image from WikiMedia):
Using this method, one man can create a 6" high shelter in less than an hour, using nothing but the stuff he's standing on.
The idea is that the wireframe will be free standing, and give us a substrate to build on. The sheet is to fill in the gaps between blocks, keep the wind out and complete the "all white" effect. If we manage to get the blocks nestled together closely enough, very little sunlight will make it through directly to the sheet.
What next?