Zephyr ​Pavilion​, a windswept canopy, offers a shaded ​passage through the courtyard of the Honors Residence Hall at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas. ​The pavilion, designed by Marc Fornes /​ Theverymany, serves as a social anchor at the convergence of countless flows. Dueling cantilevers extend from a knot-like center, offering both a signal and a sheltering experience along the campus path.
 

This gentle giant is a highly curated scheme of computationally finessed protocols informing a graphically rich structural skin. ​Four densely striped columns expand into bridging arcs, undulating wings and ​open looped columns that define ​oculi ​to the sky.
Marc Fornes /​ Theverymany designed a pavilion that seemed to hug cross-campus movements, pulling paths into and through its voluminous spaces. The rise and fall of the form is influenced by the various traffic paths through the space. Arches curve out of the convergence of canted columns and the quietly sophisticated body opens new views onto the campus architecture, and to the sky above.

The hollow-bodied structure harnesses flowing trajectories in diagonalized stripes of intense curvature which shear out from an articulated base and provide a space to meet with fellow students, study while enjoying a coffee or to simply stroll through on the way to class.
 

Project description by Marc Fornes /​ Theverymany

Situated on an active axis of collegiate life, ​Zephyr Pavilion​, a windswept canopy, activates a shaded passage through the courtyard of the Honors Residence Hall at Texas Tech University in Lubbock, Texas. The new permanent architectural structure defines a social anchor in the bustling campus community. An open courtyard becomes a nexus for the merging of innumerable paths. Zephyr elevates a daily stroll into an experiential motion through an urban passage. The rise and fall of the form is influenced by the various traffic paths through the space. Arches curve out of the convergence of canted columns and the quietly sophisticated body opens new views onto the campus architecture, and to the sky above.

PROGRESSIVE ASSEMBLY​ ​(ground up, puzzle up)

Zephyr relies on the hallmark construction process of THEVERYMANY:​ Progressive Assembly​. Each structure, broken down to its component parts, is a series of interreliant StructuralStripes.​ At this base unit of the stripe, computationally derived patterns are fully ingrained into the coloration, form, and integrity of the resulting structure. The unique conditions at Texas Tech produced a form composed of tightly coiled, angled stripes. Controlled folds produce tangential continuity of the curvature, which generates gentle movements broadly across the angular underlying geometry.​ ​As a​ ​progressive assembly​, each part fits into the position of the last and builds up without any added molding. Structural aluminum stripes climb the intensive curvature of the column and open into surface condition, generating a complex canopy overhead.​ ​Progressive assembly​ requires a very precise sequence in construction; ground up, puzzled-up. Pre-assembly of larger blocks is not an option since with every additional stripe the overall module becomes more rigid. With no given tolerances, large sections cannot be eased together. It would also require the re-introduction of heavy lifting equipment. Progressive connection of parts primes the overall form for the next piece. If a part is forced into place out of sequence it will not work. Little by little, one part at a time, the work will come together. Consequently, timing has become a vital component of the assembly process as our primary driver for shaping a double-curved surface.

DIAGONALYZED WEAVE

The studio initially invented computational protocols allowing linear stripes to describe a doubly curved, two-layered skin.​ ​The stripe system crystallized into a unified, efficient architectonic system. Sometimes, depending on the location and orientation of the system, an issue can arise in which an unwanted hierarchy is formed between the layers: one layer carries more downloads when the other mostly acts as a connector or unifier. In Zephyr, the system was diagonalized - rotated 45 degrees - in order for both layers to carry downloads and act as connectors simultaneously. With the stressors distributed equally, the layers can become optimized in terms of thickness. Material thickness is no longer solely based on dead loads and wind loads, and now responds to situational factors like point load and potential for vandalism. In Zephyr, the cross-directional patterning of structural stripes allows the formation of a span and height without any thickening, internal structure or temporary scaffolding.

A STRUCTURAL REPERTOIRE

Zephyr is a form partially reliant on physics-based principles and highly curated geometrical moves to drive its design. In design research across the last 30 projects, the studio’s principle of Structural Stripes​ have reached a temporary apex in defining optimum thickness. ​Structure is no longer the main driver for this optimization.​ The extended series of built experiments in ultra-thin structural geometry has propelled a return to form as composition. The work is opening itself to new formal moves that would have not been structurally optimal if based on the quest for structure alone. ​Open looped columns, funneled bridges, ​a bisecting ​creased spine ​and streamlined​ locked edges​ define the beginning of a repertoire of structural typologies that produce the intensive curvature on Zephyr Pavilion.​ At this level of compressed striping, the skin is able to carry more loads, making it possible for the first time to produce ​self- supporting cantilevers.​ Zephyr’s projecting wings are held aloft solely by the layering and subtle folds of its structural skin, as a ​cantilever-shell,​ that is neither the typical compressives hell structure loaded at its edges, nor the typical beam cantilever. ​The resulting space complicates the understanding of interior and exterior when the enclosure finally reveals itself as totally hollow from the projected ends.

FREE(D) FORM: COMPOSED FORM FINDING

Zephyr Pavilion is a structure that introduces the principle of​ Free(d) Form​ in our body of work. Released from essential form finding constraints, one can sample, combine and curate from a structural topology repertoire to produce something truly environmentally unique. Zephyr is formally derived from carefully composed mesh topology samples. Each sample, once computationally relaxed, is known to create efficient structural moments within the overall architectural system. Rather than a universally applied form finding process, which can be somewhat limiting and predictable, topological composition​ ​combined with local form finding allows for greater freedom while still addressing structural efficiency. Such an approach to problem solving enables the combination of a shell structure and cantilevers into one integrated structural skin. Supported stripe to stripe, the work is opened to create spaces of volume not only under the flowing canopy but within the hollow body itself. Inside a wind tunnel, through a colonnade or under a canopy, the campus community will find a slowed moment of peace, as if carried away by a pleasant westerly wind.

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Dimensions.- 18’ H x 48’ W x 13’ D. Material.- two layers of 3mm aluminum. Linear Cut Distance.- 7,400 meter. Number of Parts.- 2,343. Number of Rivets.- 59,216.
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Marc Fornes is a registered “Architect DPLG”. As fine connoisseur in computer science he designs through writing text files, or codes. Hiding under his long time label THEVERYMANY™ he is a recognized figure in the development of computational protocols applied to the field of design and fabrication. His extensive body of research on ways to describe complex curvilinear surfaces into a series of flat elements has defined a field of Computational Skinning for architecture. Researching through practice in NYC, he self-defines his studio’s agenda as a quest for ”Explicit and Encoded” and “Precise Indetermination”.

As THEVERYMANY™ – Marc has designed and built over the last 10 years an extensive body of experimental, highly organic, large scale and self-supported structures, between art and architectures. His prototypical work has been acquired and displayed as part of the permanent collection of the Centre Pompidou (Paris), the FRAC Centre (Orleans, FR), the CNAP and some private collections. He has exhibited work at the Guggenheim (Contemplating the Void), Miami Art Basel /GGG, Art Paris and sold at auction at Phillips De Pury.

Marc is a TED Fellow. He has been invited to talk within institutions across the globe, including the MoMA (NYC). In 2012 he has been the recipient of the Artist residency at the Atelier Calder(FR) and his studio has been awarded the New Practices New York 2012 by the American Institute of Architects. His architectural work for Louis Vuitton is the recipient of the A+ Jury Award in the Pop Up category, the Architectural League Prize (2013), Design Vanguard by Architectural Record (2013) and the WAN 21 for 21 Award.

Involved in academia, Marc -together with Francois Roche- started “(n)Certainties”, a graduate studio at Columbia University (NYC) with visiting semesters at the University of Southern California (Los Angeles) and at Die Angewandte (Vienna). He since taught at Princeton,Harvard/GSD and the University of Michigan. In parallel of academia, Marc is teaching a numerous of scripting workshops (in Python) for Robert McNeel (Rhino3d).

In 2007 he designed and launched http://www.scriptedbypurpose.net the first exhibition exclusively focusing on scripted processes within design, and curated in 2008 the European section for the Architecture Biennale in Beijing.


Marc Fornes

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Published on: September 20, 2019
Cite: "A continuous and constant construction process. Zephyr ​Pavilion by Marc Fornes /​ Theverymany" METALOCUS. Accessed
<http://www.metalocus.es/en/news/a-continuous-and-constant-construction-process-zephyr-pavilion-marc-fornes-theverymany> ISSN 1139-6415
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