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Learning from Nature Pavilion, Danish Building, Project, Photo, Design,
Image
Learning from Nature Pavilion : Architecture Information
3XN Pavilion in Denmark
3XN showcase pavilion
'Learning from Nature', Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark
25 Jun 2009
Self-cleaning surfaces, phase changing materials and built-in sensors
that generate energy from the footsteps of the visitors. The 3XN pavilion
'Learning from Nature' unites the most advanced technologies and intelligent
materials in a preview of the innovative architectural design of tomorrow.

photos : 3XN / Adam Mørk
The Louisiana Museum of Modern Art invited the Danish architecture
firm 3XN to design a pavilion demonstrating cutting edge possibilities
within sustainable and intelligent materials. The result is a pavilion
that is built of bio composites with integrated intelligence that
creates a dynamic interaction with its physical surroundings and its
users.
Sustainability does not equal architectural compromise
The pavilion is called 'Learning from Nature' and everything about
the pavilion is literally inspired by nature itself: The biological
cycle of nature is the fundamental basis for the shape, the materials
and the dynamic energy generation. The pavilion is shaped as a Moebius
band to symbolize the biological cycle; and the properties of the
construction are very like those of nature - for example, the pavilion
has a coating of nanoparticles that helps clean the surfaces and clean
the air. Additionally, the pavilion is built of biodegradable materials;
and as for energy, the pavilion is 100 percent self-sufficient.
Kim Herforth Nielsen, Principal of 3XN, comments on the project:
- The Pavilion has given us the opportunity to showcase the possibilities
which exist in building with sustainable and intelligent materials.
Our objective has been to show that Green Architecture can be dynamic
and active. We often think that we need to minimize use of resources
at all costs. Instead of focusing on consuming the least amount of
energy, we need to focus on producing and using energy and materials
in a more intelligent way than is the case today.
The development of the pavilion is a natural continuation of 3XNs
extensive focus on new technologies and materials; a focus that led
to the establishment of a unique in-house Research & Development
unit in 2007. Since then, 3XN has built an international reputation
as one of the most visionary and ambitious architecture firms in the
field.
'Learning from Nature' is unveiled today and can be seen at the Louisiana
Museum of Modern Art, Denmark, until October.
Louisiana Museum of Modern Art
Louisiana Museum
of Modern Art Exhibition : Green Architecture for the Future
3XNs LOUISIANA PAVILION
As part of the 'Green Architecture for the Future' architectural exhibition,
the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art invited 3XN to design a pavilion
demonstrating cutting edge possibilities with sustainable and intelligent
materials.
The Pavilion has given us the opportunity to showcase the possibilities
which exist in building with sustainable and intelligent materials.
Our objective has been to show that Green Architecture can be dynamic
and active. We often think that we need to minimize use of resources
at all costs. Instead of focusing on consuming the least amount of
energy, we need to focus on producing and using energy and materials
in a more intelligent way than is the case today, says Kim Herforth
Nielsen, Founder and Principal architect of 3XN.
The vision of the project has been to build with biodegradable and
energy-generating materials, creating an energy-self-sufficient architecture
that also can be part of, and be decomposed in, the biological cycle
after use.
New Combinations
Sustainable solutions are often associated with architectural compromises.
For this reason it has been important to show that sustainable materials
have legitimate future potential in the building industry - practically
as well as aesthetically. Building with intelligent and biological
materials with a refined finish, in a complex mode of expression,
pushes the limit in people's minds of what is obtainable with sustainable
materials today.
Sustainable Materials
Well-known synthetic products have been substituted with biological
and reusable materials. For the outer shell of the sculpture, glass
fiber composites have been substituted with a bio composite from flax
fibers cast in biological resin. Cork sheets replace polystyrene foam
for the inner core.
Intelligent Materials
For the sculpture, the newest built-in technologies have been applied
creating a dynamic and green architecture. On the top face of the
pavilion, 1mm flexible solar cells are placed. The cells are cast
in thin film making them applicable to double curved surfaces. Piezoelectric
materials that generate an electric current from the weight of the
visitors are laid in the floor. Combined, this makes the sculpture
self-sufficient with energy to power the integrated LED lights.
"Why not build dynamic buildings that harvest energy from the
surroundings?"
The pavilion has a coating of nanoparticles that makes the surfaces
self-cleaning. Due to a hydrophilic nanostructure, rain water is dispersed
beneath the dirt on the surface, leaving it cleaner. A second coating
adds air cleaning properties to the pavilion. A chemical process called
photocatalysis decomposes up to 70 percent of pollutants from industrial
smog. Documentation shows that the air quality is improved within
an 8-feet radius of air cleaning surfaces.
The pavilion retains heat by using phase changing materials. Heated
by the sun, the material retains the energy, releasing it again when
the temperature drops. At exactly 23 degrees Celsius, the material
changes from a solid to a liquid form. When the temperature rises,
the material absorbs energy and is liquefied. When the temperature
drops, it solidifies and releases energy. In other words, the surface
of the pavilion remains cooler when the temperature of the surroundings
is rising, and vice versa. It is estimated that phase changing materials
can cut costs with 10 to 15 percent on heating and cooling of buildings.
Digital Design and Production
The design of the pavilion is optimized according to function and
material consumption. The mode of expression and material consumption
is digitally designed to meet the exact needs, i.e. 14 layers of fiber
and 84mm of cork are specifically designed to meet the dynamic forces
arising from wind load and the load from people walking on the surface.
Adapting the new sustainable materials to the digital modes of production
has been a huge challenge in itself. The learning process of substituting
synthetic materials for biological counterparts has spanned the entire
project phase, revealing many obstacles and given rise to new innovations
on the way.
Process
The Louisiana Pavilion is a joint venture of 20 companies. Due to
a tight 4-month schedule and a high level of ambition, it was essential
that all parties involved took ownership of the project; that concept,
design, innovation and production were all in play at the same time
during the development phase - a process where several project phases
melted into one. This called for close, integrated cooperation between
everyone involved.
The Design Team
Participating from 3XN was: Kim Herforth Nielsen, Kasper Guldager
Jørgensen, Rasmus Møller, Christian Bundegaard, Stian
Lenes and Morten Myrup.
Learning from Nature Pavilion - Project Partners
3XN - architects and project management
COWI - engineering and light design
Stage One Freeform Composites - production and installation
BASF, the chemical company - phase changing materials
Ashland Inc. - producer of bioresin
Amorim Cork Composites - producer of cork
Libeco-Lagae - producer of natural fibers
Flex Cell - producer of flexible photovoltaic
Noliac Motion - producer of piezoelectric materials
Nano-X GmbH - self-cleaning surface coatings
Phillips - producer of LED light
3M - structural tape
Micronal PCM©, climate control - phase changing materials
Optima Projects Limited - composite consultant
NetComposites Ltd. - network within composites
Scenetek - installation of electrical components
Danish Technological Institute - self-cleaning counseling
Risø National Laboratory DTU - Composite testing
Learning from Nature Pavilion images / information from 3XN Architects
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Comments / photos for the Learning from Nature Pavilion Copenhagen Architecture page welcome:
info@e-architect.co.uk
Learning from Nature Pavilion Building : page
- adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
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