|
|
P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center New York, Architecture, Building, Image, Design
P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center Canopy : Information
Canopy Structure, Manhattan, USA
CANOPY: MoMA / P.S.1 Young Architects Program: Project Description

photos from nARCHITECTS
Canopy was a temporary structure built with green bamboo in the courtyard
of P.S.1, a contemporary art and music venue whose weekly Warm Up
music parties attract 8,000 revelers every Saturday in the summer.
Museum goers lounge, play, and dance to some of the most avant-garde
djs and groups to visit New York. The weekday and Sunday audience
is quieter: students, and families with children. Overall, Canopy
was host to more than 100,000 visitors during its five months of existence,
during which time it underwent a slow transformation as the freshly
cut green bamboo turned from green to tan. This rapid transformation
emphasized Canopys brevity, allowing visitors to experience
the effects of time in a direct and tactile way.
The English word canopy refers to both the overarching covering of
a sky and the uppermost region of a forest. The architects developed
the idea of a deep landscape to stitch together the limits
of the existing site (ground, concrete walls, sky) with one material.
Canopy relied on a singular tectonic system for shade, structure,
and atmosphere. Pinches in the undulating lattice produced a range
of shadow densities and patterns across the courtyard. Dips in the
canopy defined rooms open to the sky, each with a distinct climatic
environment for different modes of lounging: Pool Pad incorporated
a large wading pool; Fog Pad was surrounded by nozzles that spread
a halo of cool mist on revelers; Rainforest featured a sound environment
and misters that provided intermittent rain showers and randomly soaked
the crowd; and Sand Hump's sandy cove maximized exposure to either
sun or shade.
photos : Frank Oudeman
Process: 3D to 2D to construction
nARCHITECTS' challenge resided in the physical translation of a geometrically
precise structure, using a natural material with inherently variable
characteristics. Every arc in Canopy was digitally modeled in 3D,
then exported as a 2D elevation drawing, with its exact length and
intersection points indicated. The type, general shape, and critical
radius of the arc dictated the pole selection, orientation, and splicing
method. nARCHITECTS and their team of architecture students and recent
graduates then spent six weeks on site testing each arc type to determine
the maximum span, minimum bending radii, and overlap dimensions, before
building the structure itself over a period of seven weeks. The project
utilized 9,400 meters of flexible, freshly cut green Philostachys
Aurea bamboo from Georgia, spliced and bound together with 11,300
meters of stainless-steel wire.
Since Canopy was designed as a three-dimensional structural network,
the arcs were subjected to more stress during erection than in the
final stage. The architects devised a phasing sequence that optimized
the structural capabilities of bamboo and minimized breakages. Starting
with small areas of the canopy, the team erected structural spanning
arcs first and non-supporting arcs second, repeating the sequence
until the overall shape had developed. Each arc was assembled on the
ground by splicing together 7-meter bamboo poles with stainless-steel
wire and marking off each intersection point. Their tips wrapped in
neoprene, structural spanning arcs were inserted into the steel pipes
welded to either ring beams or wall straps. Once lifted into place,
they were temporarily held at their intersections with other arcs
with plastic zip ties. Matching the exact length of the drawn profile
from the digital model naturally produced a close approximation in
shape and height for each erected arc. However, the precise geometry
was achieved by stretching surveying strings across critical gridlines,
adjusting heights with temporary posts and nudging each arc into place
before finally binding each intersection with wire. The wire made
for a rigid lattice, and the final canopy acted as a multi-directional
structural network of more than 300 individual arcs, whose shape was
precisely translated from the digital model.
At the end of the summer, nARCHITECTS sold the bamboo as raw material
to the artist Matthew Barneys studio, for the construction of
scaffolding in a film set. Everyone assumed that the bamboo would
have lost its elasticity after being effectively molded into shape
for so long, so it was a surprise when the bamboo immediately sprang
back straight as soon as it was cut down.
photos : Frank Oudeman
P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center Canopy - Building
Information
Location: P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, New York
Program: Urban beach / outdoor lounge and music venue
Completion: June 2004
Client: MoMA / P.S.1
Materials: 30800lf (10000m) Philostachys Aurea bamboo,
laser cut hot rolled steek, 37000lf (12000m) of stainless
steel wire, Polyurea on EPS foam, cedar decking, traffic paint, sand,
fog system, sound environment.
Area: 30000sf ((3000sqm) space; 11000sf (1100sqm)
coverage.
Competition Team: Eric Bunge, Mimi Hoang (Principals); Jorge Pereira
(Project Architect), Samuel Dufaux, with Kayt Brumder, Phu Hoang,
Claudia Martinho, Marica McKeel, Christopher Rountos, Dayoung Shin,
Nik Vekic.
Fabrication Team: Eric Bunge, Nick Gelpi, Mimi Hoang, Matt Hutchinson,
Ian Keough, Jonathan Kurtz, Jeannie Lee, Marica McKeel, Jorge Pereira,
Aaron Tweedie, with Anthony Acciavatti, Jenny Chou, Samuel Dufaux,
Jennifer Fetner, Toru Hasegawa, Mark Hash, Hikaru Iwasaka, Sebastian
Potz, Christopher Rountos, Kevin Sipe, Peter Thon, Nik Vekic.
Consultants: Dave Flanagan, President Northeast Chapter, American
Bamboo Society, Boston; Markus Schulte, Oce Arup & Partners, NY;
Garden: Marie Viljoen, NY; Sound Environment: José Ignacio
Hinestrosa
photos from nARCHITECTS
New York Architecture
Museum of Contemporary Art New York - Extension
New York Skyscrapers
|
Derek Lam Boutique
SANAA

picture from the architects
Derek Lam New York
Giorgio Armani, Fifth Avenue
Massimiliano Fuksas Architects

picture courtesy of Studio Fuksas
Giorgio Armani New York

World Architecture : e-architect
- key buildings across the globe
Comments / photos for the P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center Canopy New York
Architecture page welcome: info@e-architect.co.uk
P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center Canopy : page
- adrian welch / isabelle lomholt |
|
|
|