Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Shigeru Ban uses shipping containers and paper tubes to create a surprising mobile museum

Shigeru Ban, Shigeru Ban architecture, Nomadic Museum, traveling museum, cargotecture, shipping container architecture, shipping container construction, paper tube construction, paper tube architecture, green architecture, green museum, green designImage via Flickr user paolomazzoleni

Colbert originally contacted Ban in 2000 with the idea and the concept finally came to fruition after several years of evolving. The exterior walls of the structure are made up of shipping containers placed in a checkerboard pattern. In between the shipping containers are pieces of PVC supporting a roof made out of a large PVC membrane. Pediments constructed of paper and metal tubes accent the exterior.

Shigeru Ban, Shigeru Ban architecture, Nomadic Museum, traveling museum, cargotecture, shipping container architecture, shipping container construction, paper tube construction, paper tube architecture, green architecture, green museum, green designImage via informedmindstravel on Flickr.

Inside, 30-inch paper columns create a cathedral-like nave where the photographs hang. To help guide circulation, a path was constructed out of wood that was re-used from construction scaffolding, with river rock making up the rest of the floor surface.

Related: Shigeru Ban Architects’ Oita Prefectural Art Museum opens in Japan

Shigeru Ban, Shigeru Ban architecture, Nomadic Museum, traveling museum, cargotecture, shipping container architecture, shipping container construction, paper tube construction, paper tube architecture, green architecture, green museum, green designImage via Flickr user paolomazzoleni

Though the general concept remained consistent, the construction of the building changed depending on where it was located. While in New York on Pier 54, the building was one long 963-foot gallery with an opening on one end for showing the artist’s movies. In Santa Monica, the space consisted of two side-by-side galleries configured like an “H” with a butterfly roof. Tokyo featured a similar configuration. The shipping containers were mostly rented locally, but some were used to ship the structure between locations. And although the artist received mixed reviews on his exhibition, critics raved about Shigeru Ban’s design.

+ Shigeru Ban

+ Gregory Colbert

via ArchDaily

Images via Paolo Mazzoleni on Flickr, Naoya Fujii on Flickr, Informedmindstravel on Flickr and Shigeru Ban


from Inhabitat - Green Design, Innovation, Architecture, Green Building http://ift.tt/1VHlygk


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