360° stereoscopic view of the ‘readymade’ structural installation
‘readymade’ is the work of a team of interior design and architecture students from germany’s university of applied sciences in darmstadt, under the direction of architect boris banozic. the piece was designed as an exhibition stand for the [d3] exhibition for young designers at imm cologne 2011.
front elevation view
the installation consists of two walls (6mx9m long), erected without any further support by bending them to a curved position. the resulting amorphous form is composed of 1,148 metersticks, 2,296 screws and 574 plastic fasteners.
departing from the topic of readymades, the piece is at once a reaction to a tight budget of € 3,000, as well as an investigation of the potentials of already existing materials and products to generate space. the team’s self-stated goals were to transform a standard, ordinary form into an extraordinary one, and to create an extensive spatial work starting with the smallest possible unit.
side elevation view
detail entrance view
inside view
in search of a product with the potential of creating space and reflecting our faculty in one way or another, the team came upon the folding meterstick: the tool of the architect and at the same time the link between the architect and the craftsman. long used to measure space, the designers decided to create space with it.
above side view
above view
to get a stable structure only with metersticks, a knot was developed by interlocking two metersticks and putting a lace around it. by adding the resulting crosses by overlapping and screwing together components, the team generated a strong horizontal structure, capable of reaching a freestanding height of 2.70m.
superimpositions view
construction detail view
interlocked connection view
overlap connection view
members of the student team
the student team is composed of christoph stoll, johannes herud, carina cestaro, maren hoess, isabelle hack, lina moeller, susanne pauls, rebekka brasch, and kristina kriegbaum.
concept rendering of the project
designboom has received these images from our new ‘DIY submissions‘ feature, where we welcome our readers to submit their own work for publication.we have already acquired many submissions, so keep on the lookout for more of your projects to be published in the coming days!