View allAll Photos Tagged tensegrity

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Lindblom Park Pool Arch 305

 

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Lindblom Structure Detail Model Lindblom Park Pool Arch 305

 

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Tensegrity Toy Models Lindblom Park Pool Arch 305

 

Rendering Inside

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Outside Rendering

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Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

Capacitor Dance under the direction of Jodi Lomask was preparing an interactive dance routine based on our tensegrity robot structures. To inspire the choreography we went to the Crucible in Oakland to prototype some possible structures. Here we see Jodi Lomask,and Jeremy Faludi working on a prototype.

Piece number 2

Glass beads and very thin fishing line.

2 1/2 inches long.

Pendant .

A oficina de robótica: robôs dançantes - tensegrity - ocorreu no dia 11/08/2016 e foi facilitada pelo artista tecnológico Fernando Daguanno, maker argentino que vive no Brasil. A partir da mistura de processos analógicos e digitais demos vida a essas pequenas estruturas arquitetônicas autoportantes - tensegrity.

Fotos: Conrado Bassini/ Meduzza

This bracelet is called Jackson Pollack.

Glass beads by the thousand.

A week of non stop work [50 hrs].

Very solid and rigid. very comfortable.

Czech and Japanese glass beads, held together with fishing line .

Alice Agogino and her Berkeley Emergent Space Tensegrities (BEST) Lab from UC Berkeley demonstrated their rapid prototyped tensegrity robots for Dr. Dava Newman, the newly minted Deputy Administrator of NASA on Friday July 17.

Piece # 7.

Tons of Swarovski crystals, palladium beads, garnet and rose quartz beads, glow in the dark Czech beads, and matsuno and miyuki.

2 1/3 inches high

The framework covered in our customer cut and riveted tarp panels.

2 inches high. Swarovski pearls and crystals, Hematite, mikuki beads, matsuno beads, fireline 6 lb test. super solid. Not wiggly anywhere.

The Music Medicine - Music Therapy Workshop with Dimitrios with guest visual artist MrTilki Art (a.k.a. Cedric Menard) [FR].

 

***

 

Shots from The Music Medicine - Music Therapy Workshop with Dimitrios at Dancentrum.

 

Program:

// Opening

// Opening of the Circle (Identification and Sharing of Intention)

// Tensegrity (Magical Passes) movement by Aksel Pekyalçın

// Music Therapy Session with Dimitrios

// Closing of the Circle (Sharing of experience and Collective Meditation)

 

***

 

Photography:

Semi Koen

Measuring and staking the rebar locations. The entire shelter is the pile and box beside us.

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

Andrew Sabelhaus, Adrian Agogino and other members of the NASA Ames tensegrity robotics team

The Random Nucleic Acid is a free-standing tensegrity tower located in the central stairway of 290 Massachusetts Avenue.

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

The Music Medicine - Music Therapy Workshop with Dimitrios with guest visual artist MrTilki Art (a.k.a. Cedric Menard) [FR].

 

***

 

Shots from The Music Medicine - Music Therapy Workshop with Dimitrios at Dancentrum.

 

Program:

// Opening

// Opening of the Circle (Identification and Sharing of Intention)

// Tensegrity (Magical Passes) movement by Aksel Pekyalçın

// Music Therapy Session with Dimitrios

// Closing of the Circle (Sharing of experience and Collective Meditation)

 

***

 

Photography:

Semi Koen

The Music Medicine - Music Therapy Workshop with Dimitrios with guest visual artist MrTilki Art (a.k.a. Cedric Menard) [FR].

 

***

 

Shots from The Music Medicine - Music Therapy Workshop with Dimitrios at Dancentrum.

 

Program:

// Opening

// Opening of the Circle (Identification and Sharing of Intention)

// Tensegrity (Magical Passes) movement by Aksel Pekyalçın

// Music Therapy Session with Dimitrios

// Closing of the Circle (Sharing of experience and Collective Meditation)

 

***

 

Photography:

Semi Koen

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

Kenneth Snelson, 2005

Workshop at Sushant School of Arts & Architecture for second year Students On Saturday, April 11, 2015 By Prof. M.S. Satsangi & Utssav Gupta

The Skylon, a feature of The Festival of Britain, 30th March 1951. One of South Bank’s lost icons, the story of how Skylon came to be a part of the Festival of Britain is an intriguing one. The organisers ran a competition for the design of a ‘vertical feature’ after the Festival’s committee decided that there should be a tower to act as a marker on the site. It was won by two young architects - Hidalgo Moya (29) and Philip Powell (28) - out of nearly 200 entrants.

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Aware that their design was so unconventional, bold and daring, Powell and Moya sought the advice of structural engineer Felix Samuely, who helped refine Skylon to make it appear even more gravity defying. The finished design now fittingly embraced the imminent dawn of the space age. In fact the Skylon, looked like it had been plucked from the world of science-fiction and captured so many people’s imaginations.

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Standing at 300 feet and weighing 100 tonnes, it was an awe-inspiring sight as it rose from the banks of the Thames, suspended as in mid-air. At night it was lit from inside by hundreds of lightbulbs, and by day, when it was windy, the air rushed through the aluminium louvres that ran up the length of its central section, and made a humming sound.

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But after The Festival of Britain where did it end up? After years of debate and searching, it was the campaign led by BBC Radio 4’s Front Row program who finally got to the bottom of the truth. Like so much of the Festival’s infrastructure Skylon, after being was taken down on the orders of Winston Churchill, it was sold to George Cohen and Sons Scrap Metal Dealers. Skylon then, is best remembered for what it was and how it captured the hearts and minds of a British post-war public.

 

The Skylon was a 300 feet high futuristic-looking, slender, vertical, cigar-shaped steel tensegrity structure located by the Thames, that gave the illusion of 'floating' above the ground, built for the Festival.

 

It was designed by Hidalgo Moya, Philip Powell and Felix Samuely, and fabricated by Painter Brothers of Hereford,

 

edited from wikipedia.

 

A popular joke of the period was that, like the British economy of 1951, "It had no visible means of support".

 

{At the top, the east, of the circle:}

Remembering the Skylon. Festival of Britain, 1951.

{Around the circle:}

I saw a blade which rises in the sky held by hardly nothing at all.

 

exploring-london.com/2011/07/01/lost-london-the-skylon/

  

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