Source: treehugger.com

Published: March 26, 2014

By Kimberley Mok

Abeer Seikaly

© Abeer Seikaly/2013 LEXUS DESIGN AWARD – Abeer Seikaly – weaving a home

Innovative disaster shelters have run the gamut of materials like recyclable plastic, to flat pack wonders, to affordable bamboo homes that float when it floods. Jordanian-Canadian designer Abeer Seikaly turns to solar-absorbing fabric as his material of choice in creating woven shelters that are powered by the sun and inspired by nomadic culture.

The use of structural fabric references ancient traditions of joining linear fibers to make complex three-dimensional shapes – the resulting pattern is easy to erect and scale into various functions, from a basket to a tent. the project incorporates technological advances and new methods of assembly of the material, envisioning a system composed of durable plastic members that are threaded to form a singular unit. These flexible envelopes fold across a central axis, with the hollow structural skin enabling necessities such as water and electricity to run through it, similar to a typical stud wall.

See Ted Talk here: https://youtu.be/tYFzy1_EmBM

© Abeer Seikaly

Utilizing the structural principles of tensegrity and biomimicking the blooming action of a flower, the structure can open and close from its center point. Probably one of the most elegant disaster shelters we’ve ever come across — check out many more images and drawings over at Designboom and Abeer Seikaly.