Luminapolis

Monat: August 2008

  • Darmstädter Architektursommer: Solar House Coming Home

    Darmstadt. Am 31. August ab 10.00 Uhr ist das energieeffizienteste Solarhaus der Welt zu besichtigen. Entstanden ist es an der TU Darmstadt. Jetzt wird es dauerhaft auf der Lichtwiese errichtet. Mehr> Siehe auch Luminapolis-Report Raumcontainer

    Darmstadt. 31st August from 10h the most energy-efficient solar house of the world can be visited. It comes from the University of Technology of Darmstadt. Now it is established permanently on the Lichtwiese (light meadow). More> Look also Luminapolis-report space container.

  • Olympic Lighting in Beijing

    Peking. Die Regie für die Feierlichkeiten der Olympischen Spiele führte der international bekannte Filmregisseur Zhang Yimou. Laserlicht, LEDs, Feuerwerk mischten High Tech mit Tradition. Technischer Direktor Yu Jianping verwendete zur Steuerung des Events Software aus dem chinesischen Raumfahrtprogramm. Martin Professional lieferte allein 1.100 automatisierte Scheinwerfer. Andere Technologie-Partner: HD-Projektion/High End Systems und Moving Lights/Vari*Lite und Clay Paky. Beeindruckend die Feuerwerks-Inszenierung von Cai Guo Qiang. Der Künstler ist international bestens bekannt. Er stellte unter anderem auch im Deutschen Guggenheim in Berlin aus. Im Team auch der Deutsche Andree Verleger aus Düsseldorf. Hier einige Links zu Hintergründen: Interview mit Zhang Yimou und seinem Team Mehr> Der Entstehungsprozess Mehr> Technology details and pictures Mehr>

    Beijing. Internationally well known director Zhang Yimou led the direction for the festivities of the Olympic games. Laser light, LEDs, fireworks mixed hightech with tradition. Technical manager Yu Jianping used software from the Chinese space program to manage the event. Martin Professional delivered 1.100 automated luminaires. (Read the interview with chinese lighting designer Sha Xiao Lan). Other technology partners: HD-Projection/High End Systems and Moving Lights/Vari*Lite, Clay Paky. Especially impressively the fireworks invented by Cai Guoqiang. The artist is perfectly known internationally. Among the rest, he also exhibited at the German Guggenheim in Berlin. Member of team also was the German Andree Verleger from Duesseldorf. Here some links as backgrounds: Interview with Zhang Yimou and his team More> The making of More> Technology details and pictures More>

  • Green Energy: Kennedy’s Photovoltaic Curtains

    Boston. Aufsehen erregende Neuigkeit vom Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT aus Boston). Sheila Kennedy, die sich mit der Integration von Solarzellen in die Architektur beschäftigt, hat Strom erzeugende Vorhänge entwickelt. Das Büro Kennedy Violich Architecture betreibt auch seit längerem das Projekt „Portable Light„, das in Entwicklungsländern zu einer vom Netz unabhängigen Beleuchtung in den Abendstunden beiträgt, die beispielsweise für die Bildung nach Feierabend genutzt werden kann.

    Aber lesen Sie selbst: „Sheila Kennedy, an expert in the integration of solar cell technology in architecture who is now at MIT, creates designs for flexible photovoltaic materials that may change the way buildings receive and distribute energy. These new materials, known as solar textiles, work like the now-familiar photovoltaic cells in solar panels. Made of semiconductor materials, they absorb sunlight and convert it into electricity.

    Kennedy uses 3-D modeling software to design with solar textiles, generating membrane-like surfaces that can become energy-efficient cladding for roofs or walls. Solar textiles may also be draped like curtains.“Surfaces that define space can also be producers of energy,“ says Kennedy, a visiting lecturer in architecture. „The boundaries between traditional walls and utilities are shifting.“

    Principal architect in the Boston firm, Kennedy & Violich Architecture, Ltd., and design director of its materials research group, KVA Matx, Kennedy came to MIT this year. She was inspired, she says, by President Susan Hockfield’s plan to make MIT the „energy university“ and by MIT’s interdisciplinary energy curriculum that integrates research and practice.

    This spring, Kennedy taught a new MIT architecture course, Soft Space: Sustainable Strategies for Textile Construction. She challenged the students to design architectural proposals for a new fast train station and public market in Porto, Portugal.

    For Mary Hale, graduate student in architecture, Kennedy’s Soft Space course was an inspiration to pursue photovoltaic technology in her master’s thesis. „I have always been interested in photovoltaics, but before this studio, I am not sure that I would have felt empowered to integrate them into a personal, self-propelled, project,“ she says.

    Kennedy, for her part, will pursue her research in pushing the envelope of energy-efficiency and architecture. A recent project, „Soft House,“ exhibited at the Vitra Design Museum in Essen, Germany, illustrates what Kennedy means when she says the boundaries between walls and utilities are changing.

    For Soft House, Kennedy transformed household curtains into mobile, flexible energy-harvesting surfaces with integrated solid-state lighting. Soft House curtains move to follow the sun and can generate up to 16,000 watt-hours of electricity–more than half the daily power needs of an average American household. Although full-scale Soft House prototypes were successfully developed, the project points to a challenge energy innovators and other inventors face, Kennedy says. „Emerging technologies tend to under-perform compared with dominant mainstream technologies.“

    For example, organic photovoltaics (OPV), an emergent solar nano-technology used by the Soft House design team, are currently less efficient than glass-based solar technologies, Kennedy says.

    But that lower efficiency needn’t be an insurmountable roadblock to the marketplace, Kennedy says, because Soft House provides an actual application of the unique material advantages of solar nano-technologies without having to compete with the centralized grid.

    Which brings her back to the hands-on, prototype-building approach Kennedy hopes to draw from in her teaching and work at MIT. „Working prototypes are a very important demonstration tool for showing people that there are whole new ways to think about energy,“ she says.“

    Links to Kennedy & Violich Architecture, Ltd.>

    Links to the non-profit project portablelight.org>

    Link to Luminale/Boston connection>Boston. MIT news reports: Sheila Kennedy, an expert in the integration of solar cell technology in architecture who is now at MIT, creates designs for flexible photovoltaic materials that may change the way buildings receive and distribute energy. These new materials, known as solar textiles, work like the now-familiar photovoltaic cells in solar panels. Made of semiconductor materials, they absorb sunlight and convert it into electricity.

    Kennedy uses 3-D modeling software to design with solar textiles, generating membrane-like surfaces that can become energy-efficient cladding for roofs or walls. Solar textiles may also be draped like curtains. „Surfaces that define space can also be producers of energy,“ says Kennedy, a visiting lecturer in architecture. „The boundaries between traditional walls and utilities are shifting.“

    Principal architect in the Boston firm, Kennedy & Violich Architecture, Ltd., and design director of its materials research group, KVA Matx, Kennedy came to MIT this year. She was inspired, she says, by President Susan Hockfield’s plan to make MIT the „energy university“ and by MIT’s interdisciplinary energy curriculum that integrates research and practice.

    This spring, Kennedy taught a new MIT architecture course, Soft Space: Sustainable Strategies for Textile Construction. She challenged the students to design architectural proposals for a new fast train station and public market in Porto, Portugal.

    For Mary Hale, graduate student in architecture, Kennedy’s Soft Space course was an inspiration to pursue photovoltaic technology in her master’s thesis. „I have always been interested in photovoltaics, but before this studio, I am not sure that I would have felt empowered to integrate them into a personal, self-propelled, project,“ she says.

    Kennedy, for her part, will pursue her research in pushing the envelope of energy-efficiency and architecture. A recent project, „Soft House,“ exhibited at the Vitra Design Museum in Essen, Germany, illustrates what Kennedy means when she says the boundaries between walls and utilities are changing.

    For Soft House, Kennedy transformed household curtains into mobile, flexible energy-harvesting surfaces with integrated solid-state lighting. Soft House curtains move to follow the sun and can generate up to 16,000 watt-hours of electricity–more than half the daily power needs of an average American household.

    Although full-scale Soft House prototypes were successfully developed, the project points to a challenge energy innovators and other inventors face, Kennedy says. „Emerging technologies tend to under-perform compared with dominant mainstream technologies.“

    For example, organic photovoltaics (OPV), an emergent solar nano-technology used by the Soft House design team, are currently less efficient than glass-based solar technologies, Kennedy says.

    But that lower efficiency needn’t be an insurmountable roadblock to the marketplace, Kennedy says, because Soft House provides an actual application of the unique material advantages of solar nano-technologies without having to compete with the centralized grid. Which brings her back to the hands-on, prototype-building approach Kennedy hopes to draw from in her teaching and work at MIT.

    „Working prototypes are a very important demonstration tool for showing people that there are whole new ways to think about energy,“ she says.

    Links to Kennedy & Violich Architecture, Ltd.>

    Links to the non-profit project portablelight.org>

    Link to Luminale/Boston connection>

  • iGuzzini illuminazione in Beijing


    The National Grand Theatre, located in the centre of Beijing, approximately 500 metres away from Tiananmen Square, is a real island of culture in the centre of a lake. iGuzzini illuminazione worked with Paul Andreu and the lighting designer Kaoru Mende to create artificial lighting in the public spaces and the foyer. The relationship between the building and the landscape by day and by night was a fundamental consideration in the design process. More>Das National Grand Theatre, im Zentrum von Peking, etwa 500 Meter vom Tien-An-Men-Platz und der Verbotenen Stadt entfernt, ist eine wahre Insel der Kultur in der Mitte eines Sees. iGuzzini illuminazione hat mit Paul Andreu und dem Lichtdesigner Kaoru Mende an der Realisierung der künstlichen Beleuchtung der öffentlichen Bereiches und des Foyers zusammen gearbeitet. Das Verhältnis zwischen dem Gebäude und der umliegenden Landschaft bei Tag und bei Nacht war von grundsätzlicher Bedeutung bei der Planung. Mehr>

  • New Director for Museum of Modern ArtNeue Direktorin im Museum für Moderne Kunst

    Frankfurt. The museum for modern art (MMK) has a new director: Dr. Susanne Gaensheimer. Udo Kittelmann moves to Berlin. Gaensheimer comes from the Lenbachhaus in Munich. There have been presented some artists who work with light during the last years: Angela Bulloch (2008), Dan Flavin (2007), Cerith Wyn Evans (2007) and Jenny Holzer (2006). The MMK has acquired the collection Ricke including some light installations. Frankfurt am Main. Das Museum für Moderne Kunst (MMK) hat eine neue Direktorin: Dr. Susanne Gaensheimer. Udo Kittelmann zieht nach Berlin weiter. Gaensheimer kommt vom Lenbachhaus in München. Dort sind in den letzten Jahren einige Künstler ausgestellt worden, die mit Licht arbeiten: zuletzt Angela Bulloch (2008), Dan Flavin (2007), Cerith Wyn Evans (2007) und Jenny Holzer (2006). Das MMK hat die Sammlung Ricke erworben, zu der auch viele Lichtarbeiten zählen.

  • Night of ChurchesNacht der Kirchen


    Wiesbaden. After lightsight 08 in the park of Kurhaus during Luminale the lighting installations go on with the „night of the churches“. Numerous churches have already participated in the Luminale (more>). Luminale activist Michael Stein (Palast Promotion) is one of the participants. Prof. Harald Hofmann (TU Darmstadt) will create a light room in the Marktkirche. More>Wiesbaden. Nach den lightsight 08-Lichtspielen im Kurpark zur Luminale setzt sich der Zyklus der Licht-Veranstaltungen mit der „Nacht der Kirchen“ fort. Schon an der Luminale haben sich zahlreiche Kirchen beteiligt (Mehr>). Mit dabei ist Luminale-Aktivist Michael Stein (Palast Promotion). Besonders gespannt darf man auf die Licht-Inszenierung von Prof. Harald Hofmann (TU Darmstadt) in der Marktkirche sein. Mehr>

  • Architektursommer Darmstadt: Raumcontainer


    Darmstadt. 28th August at 20h „Switch-On“ of the space container fire. water. earth. air within the scope of the Darmstadt architecture summer before the castle on Friedensplatz. Prof. Anke Mensing and light designer Stephan Horn of the University of Applied Sciences Darmstadt have realized the project with Tatiana Borufka, Lukas Eugler, Gaetano Lanzanó, Friederike Nürnberg and Melanie Wüllner. During Luminale the department of Architecture had an ambitious project. Darmstadt. Am 28. August um 20.00 Uhr findet ein „Switch-On“ des Raumcontainers Feuer.Wasser.Erde.Luft im Rahmen des Darmstädter Architektursommers vor dem Schloß auf dem Friedensplatz statt. Prof. Anke Mensing und Lichtdesigner Stephan Horn von der Hochschule Darmstadt haben das Projekt mit Tatjana Borufka, Lukas Eugler, Gaetano Lanzanó, Friederike Nürnberg und Melanie Wüllner realisiert. Zur Luminale hatte der Fachbereich Architektur ein ambitioniertes Projekt gestaltet.

  • Frankfurt hat eine mobile Bildungsblase Frankfurt’s Mobile Educational Bubble

    Frankfurt am Main. Die „goethe ffm – Festwoche“ nimmt Goethes Geburtstag am 28. August zum Anlass, den kosmopolitischen Dichter und Denker in seiner aktuellen Bedeutung hervorzuheben. Diesmal mit dem Schwerpunkt: KUNST MACHT BILDUNG. Mehrere Theaterpremieren, Gastspiele und eine „mobile Bildungsblase“ im öffentlichen Raum unter dem Titel GOETHES WUNDERKAMMER stehen im Mittelpunkt. Die Architektengruppe raumlabor ist für diese Intervention im öffentlichen Raum zuständig. Mehr>

    Frankfurt. „Goethe ffm– Festival“ takes the occasion of Goethe’s birthday 28th August to emphasize the cosmopolitan poet in his current meaning. This time with the main focus: ART POWERS EDUCATION. Several theatrical premières, guest performances and a „mobile educational bubble“ in the public space under the title of GOETHE MIRACLE CHAMBER stand in the center. The office raumlabor is responsible for this intervention in the public space. More>

  • Galerie Ruzicska: FIAT LUX

    Salzburg. Die Galerie Ruzicska zeigt Arbeiten von Jenny Holzer, Brigitte Kowanz, Francois Morellet, Maurizio Nannucci, Keith Sonnier und James Turrell. Vernissage tv war bei der Eröffnung dabei. Mehr>

    Salzburg. The gallery Ruzicska presents works of Jenny Holzer, Brigitte Kowanz, Francois Morellet, Maurizio Nannucci, Keith Sonnier and James Turrell. Vernissage tv made a video. More>