ShowCase is an on-going feature series on Archinect, presenting exciting new work from designers representing all creative fields and all geographies.
We are always accepting nominations for upcoming ShowCase features - if you would like to suggest a project, please send us a message.
The White Elephant is roughly 10’x10’x10’. It has three basic premises:
1. A building inside a building, somewhere between a super-furniture and a small house.
2. An object that tumbles to attain multiple orientations to blur the qualification plans and sections.
3. An object that is hard on the outside, soft on the inside.
Its exterior is clad with translucent polycarbonate, and the interior is stuffed cowhide. It tumbles and changes orientation and can flip to eight different stances.
What is a building that can tumble freely without gravity or fixed orientations, hard on the outside but soft on the inside, and obstructs the continuity of interior spaces like an elephant in a room? This installation is a freestanding micro building / macro furniture that questions projection, inside/outside, rigidity/fluidity and size/scale.
Design Leader: Jimenez Lai (previously on Archinect here and here)
Project Manager: Thomas Kelley
Fabrication: PR&vD, Andrew Akins
Team: Jimenez Lai, Thomas Kelley, Cyrus Penarroyo, Andrew Akins
Construction Assisted by: Mike Mead, John Stoughton, Anton Bakerjian
Photography: Magnus Lindqvist, Kyle D. Eberle and Kamil Kroll
The team thanks Drura Parrish, Rives Rash, and the continuing support of University of Kentucky and Land of Tomorrow.
1 Comment
Aptly named, super plaything. Love the diagrams
Block this user
Are you sure you want to block this user and hide all related comments throughout the site?
Archinect
This is your first comment on Archinect. Your comment will be visible once approved.