Concrete 'Bubbles' Made from Bubble Wrap

John Hill
19. d’octubre 2018
Photo: Per Lundström

Project: NEO - Concrete Bubbles, 2018
Location: Flemingsberg, Stockholm, Sweden
Client: Client: Karolinska Institutet, Veidekke
ArchitectTengbom
Project Team: Krister Bjurström, Anna Morén Sahlin, Kjell Jansson, Anna Mistry Bergbom, Daniel De Sousa Barrera, Miguel Reyes, Sofia Kanje, Kristoffer Adolfsson, Ana Gejo
Computational Design: Shahrokh Kamyab och Jakob Lilliemarck
Manufacturer: Butong
Butong Team: Jean-Charler Violleau, Hamid Yaldan, Malin Wahlström, Staffan Snis, John Nilsson, Lars Höglund, Benjamin Levy
Product: Translucent Concrete Panels
Lighting: Philips (Svante Pettersson, Daniel Ljung, Disco Anders)

Photo: Per Lundström (All images are courtesy of Butong)

Earlier this year the Karolinska Institutet, a medical university, moved into NEO, the new building on its Flemingsberg campus in suburban Stockholm. KI bills NEO as "a hub for basic and clinical research" and "a living venue for research, aimed to be a creative and open environment that enables meetings, synergies, and exploration of areas of mutual interest across disciplines." Designed by Stockholm's Tengbom, who also designed the neighboring Technology and Health Building, NEO consists of a variety of meeting rooms oriented about a large atrium. It's in this atrium where an oddity can be found: two "Concrete Bubbles" covered with translucent concrete.

Photo: Per Lundström

The Concrete Bubbles contain two high-tech lecture halls equipped with large LED screens. Solid panels enclose the lecture halls, so the concrete panels are an outer skin that provides an aeshetic punch. Butong's concrete panels incorporate bubble wrap into their formwork, resulting in a grid of "innies" with small membrane-perforations that allow light to pass. The colors of the concrete panels change according to a light show of LEDs both in front of and behind the panels. The effect may look like light-emitting concrete, but Butong's panels are free of fiber optics and therefore relatively "low-tech." Also, they can be used as armatures for vertical gardens!

Detail of the concrete panels and effects of front and rear illumination.
Light artists Svante Pettersson and Daniel Ljung created the lighting concept with dynamic LEDs installed both behind and in front of the panels. (Watch a light show below.)

Construction sequence for the 250 panels: formwork was made from 12 unique steel pieces; form was then filled with a plastic granulate and hand-shaped to create the 3D surface; and granulate was reused. (Watch the process below.)

The double-curved panels were mounted on a steel armature to a tolerance of ±1mm.
Lectures are held in the halls on large LED screens, while outside, announcements and speeches can be made making use of the shell and its shape.
The concrete skin with the lights off. (Photo: Per Lundström)

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