MaterialDistrict

Raise/Raze

Raise/Raze by New York based design office Hou de Sousa is a simple, lightweight and fully re-configurable assembly block system. Unveiled this summer, the concept stemmed from the Re-Ball! competition brief, which emphasized the re-purposing of a previously used material. Over 650k plastic spheres were pooled together into a massive ball pit the previous summer at The National Building Museum as part of an installation titled “The Beach” by architecture studio Snarkitecture.

The designers admired that “The Beach” was essentially formless and allowed the public to fully engage it in a tactile way by continuing these key aspects and seeking out a design which could function as a dynamic and re-usable system, rather than a specific static form. The designers were also intrigued by the fact that there was a such a large, but finite, quantity of building material and that the public could take part in an observable demonstration of the law of the conservation of mass whereby creation and destruction are inextricably linked. In this way Raise/Raze works very similarly to a playground sandbox, or a real-world full-scale version of the popular video game Minecraft. Visitors can alter the objects and environment around them with ease, with the consequence being that everything new is built from what was there before it.

Following a series of material tests and experiments with various adhesives and magnets, as well as several mock-ups, the design team arrived at a 27 ball cube that is fused together with hot glue and attaches to neighboring cubes using hook and loop fasteners at the corners (Velcro is the more commonly know proprietary eponym). Larger cubes were also tested, but the 27 ball version had the distinct advantages of weighing less, being easier to build, and providing a finer visual resolution. Although not featured in the project, one of the larger cube studies is noteworthy in that it consisted of hexagonally packed layers, which resulted in hundreds of additional connections, and thereby increased its strength to the point that an adult can stand on top of it without damaging the cube.

Raise/Raze was popular both during construction and when it opened to the public. Over a 1k people volunteered to build approximately 12k cubes in 4 weeks. 324k balls were glued into cubes which required 648k dabs of hot glue and 288k hook and loop coins. The team were delighted and stunned by the public’s embrace of the project and how much people enjoyed helping make Raise/Raze happen. There was a festive atmosphere throughout and most volunteers were surprised by how satisfying and therapeutic it was to assemble the cubes.

The “cube factory”, as it became know, was even a hotspot on several dating apps and sites.

Els Zijlstra

Comments