Project Entry 2014 for North America

  • 1 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Model study process: three different formworks were tested and a hybrid fish wire and latex sheet formwork was developed.

  • 2 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Phase 01, a new construction method study. Ephemeral Concrete explores a sustainable concrete wall panel construction method, finding a creative way to produce exterior concrete panels efficiently. The shape of the concrete panel wall is thin and curved to create a vertical frame.

  • 3 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Phase 02, possible applications of the concrete panel for building. Reaching out to the sea, a sustainable fish market uses curved concrete panels for exterior walls based on the research of the first phase of the Ephemeral Concrete project. The main program of this building is a fish market. Two different flows, industrial and people, overlap in one building.

  • 4 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Instruction of the final method: a light-weight and reusable formwork.

  • 5 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Final model making process. Mock-up model using fish wire and latex sheet.

  • 6 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Possible application of the concrete panel. Building a spatial sequence with the concrete wall panel.

  • 7 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Physical models. Possible application of the concrete panel.

  • 8 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Possible application of the concrete panel for building. Elevation, section and plan.

  • 9 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Render image and plan.

  • 10 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Render image and plan.

  • 11 / 11

    Project entry 2014 North America – Latex Formwork: Concrete wall panel construction method, Cambridge, MA, USA

    Namjoo Kim.

Last updated: March 31, 2014 Cambridge, MA, USA

The research project by a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) doctoral candidate investigates a new construction method for creating thin concrete panels in Cambridge, MA, USA. The faceted formwork consists of two elements: a substructure and a lining, with the former made of a flexible wire mesh tracing the panel’s basic geometry and the latter made of a latex sheet determining the panel’s final form. The proposed method aims to reduce the weight of concrete molds and thus the amount of material used in construction. 

Additionally, the formwork is both reusable and recyclable. Furthermore, the research of Ephemeral Concrete explores potential applications of the proposed method – leading to modular façades with a unique and strong architectural expression.

Progress: A sustainable approach when compared to previous formwork methods. After researching various formworks, three different methods were chosen to visualize the possibility: rigid mold, faceted mold, and fabric mold. The traditional way to make a thin concrete panel is to manufacture a rigid mold. With this approach, the product is exactly the same design; however, after using that mold, the material of the mold is not reusable. The material of the faceted mold is not reusable, similar to the rigid mold. The only difference is the faceted mold takes a mesh line of the digital model instead of the precise shape of the surface. The fabric mold is usually used for making a bulgy shape, because the shape is determined by the structural mass of the concrete.

New method: Creating a concrete panel using a hybrid of faceted mold and fabric mold. The structure of the mold is made of fish wire following the faceted mesh lines and the surface of the mold is a latex sheet. This is a very light-weight mold, economical and reusable.

Sustainability: It is a light-weight formwork which uses less material than a regular formwork such as rigid formwork. Also, the formwork is reusable without extra treatment because the surface of the mold is latex sheet. As a result, this method can reduce the materials for the formwork remarkably. For example, if the thin concrete panel is produced by a rigid formwork, the rigid formwork itself needs to go through various high-cost processes. However, this new formwork is very easy to make and easy to adapt later.

New connection: An interesting part of this new casting method is the gap between the shape of physical model and the digital model. Since the mold allows concrete a little freedom, the surface of the concrete panel has a unique pattern, which is fun to see.

A sustainable fish market: The fish market needs a lot of water to maintain the facility; therefore, this project introduces seawater directly from the sea to cover the usage of the water. Maintaining the temperature of cold storage facilities uses a tremendous amount of energy. This project places cold storage below sea level to keep the temperature low.

People: The fish market is not just a commercial building. This project suggests the industrial program and the public program are mixed in one building to create a diverse interaction.