Design4D Blog

Nik Hilton  //  www.design4d.co.uk
Young Architect of the Year Nominee 2009, 2010, 2011
Finalist in the British Homes Awards 2009
Finalist in the Design awards 2009

Jan 20 / 6:22pm

Self healing building skins

With rapid developments in nanotechnology I hope we are going to start seeing more active facade systems which respond to their environment and even self heal.

Our Filmic House project proposed a rubber clad house which changed colour in response to thermal loadings on the surface. In the same way humans are covered in a self healing 'skin' we saw EPDM rubber as a logical simplification of the construction process taking one continuous material across the whole building surface. The Bilbao Guggenheim museum uses rubberised asphalt which enables the titanium cladding to be fixed straight through the waterproof membrane. It therefore isn't too difficult to imagine rubber incorporating self-healing technology that would keep the building watertight even if damaged. Below is a presentation on self-healing paint that triggered this thought:

Filed under  //  Filmic House   Guggenheim   Self-healing   nanotechnology   rubber  
Nov 12 / 4:39pm

Gold nanoparticles turn trees into streetlights

This interesting idea made me wonder what other genetically modified products might be grown to enhance the urban realm? How long before buildings are grown from a DNA seed planted on a site and allowed to organically respond to the surrounding conditions within the constraints of it's genetic code?

 GIZMAG | 12 NOVEMBER 2010
http://pulsene.ws/i2ra


Gold nanoparticles turn trees into streetlights 

Filed under  //  Architecture   future   nanotechnology   public realm  
Oct 26 / 6:23pm

Carbon Nanotubes Could Create Buildings That Move

On our Creekside Arcade project we proposed solar controlled thermal shutters. With yet another example of nanotechnology and carbon nanotubes it might be possible to achieve this without using mechanical motors!

Inhabitat | 1 JANUARY 1970
http://pulsene.ws/crFS


Decker Yeadon is researching how carbon nanotubes might create building materials that move without motors.

Filed under  //  Architecture   Creekside Arcade   design   kinetic   nanotechnology  
Sep 8 / 6:56pm

New high-speed, low-cost water purifying nanofilter developed @gizmag

Combined with Living Machine technology, as used in our Waterscape City proposal, this membrane could complete the cycle from wastewater back to potable drinking water! Nanotechnology is delving deeper into the complexity of systems that make up simple organisms and finding new solutions from simple materials. With these rapid developments in science I wonder if architects will also look more carefully at what components make up buildings and how these can be enhanced in combination to create new solutions to our built environment? 
http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/GizmagEmergingTechnologyMagazine/~3/8SPGol_qWAs/
Filed under  //  Architecture   nanotechnology   water purifying