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The Protocell Mesh project integrates first-generation prototypes that include aluminium meshwork canopy scaffolding and a suspended protocell carbon-capture filter array. The scaffold that supports the installation is a resilient, self-bracing meshwork waffle composed of flexible, lightweight chevron-shaped linking components. Curving and expanding, the mesh creates a flexible hyperbolic grid-shell.

Arrayed protocells are arranged within a suspended filter that lines this scaffold. The array acts as a diffuse filter that incrementally processes carbon dioxide from the occupied atmosphere and converts it into inert calcium carbonate. The process operates in much the same way that limestone is deposited by living marine environments. Within each cell of the filter array, laser-cut Mylar valves draw humid air into a first chamber of concentrated sodium hydroxide. The solution enters a second chamber containing waterborne vesicles suspended between upper and lower oil layers. Chalk-like precipitate forming within these vesicles offers an incremental process of carbon fixing. Surrounding the active flask arrays is a grotto-like accretion of suspended vials containing salt and sugar solutions that alternately accumulate and exude moisture, contributing to a diffusive, humid skin.

Protocell Mesh is on view as part of the Prototyping Architecture Exhibition at the Univeristy of Nottingham’s Wolfson Prototyping Hall from October 17 – December 7, 2012, and The Building Centre, London from January 10 - 15 March, 2013.

In the summer of 2012 I worked with a collaboration of architects and students to create and install the 'Protocell Mesh' by architect Philip Beesley. The project was driven by the notion of making. To me, the event of the project was the production, assembly and thus making of the architecture itself.

summary:



growing architecture.



architecture using its immediate natural surroundings (by use of attraction and filtering) to grow a constructional material in the form of calcium deposits. the architecture becomes a responsive and living body. once constructed, it builds its own environment rather than relying on human interaction.

​I carried out the following whilst taking part in the production of the Protocell Mesh, all of which are essential to create a successful make. 

-research
-analysis
-collaboration
-design
-development
-edit
-sourcing
-component build
-construction
-assembly

MAKING

Film

Inserting the Protocells.

Click here to see photographs of the Protocell Mesh, Nottingham & London.

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