Flexible Brick?
Flexible brick? Apparently it is possible!
Known as ‘Flexbrick,’ this concept is the materialization of an idea of architect Vicente Sarrablo, director of the School of Architecture of the International University of Architecture Catalonia.
In the form of a ceramic textile can be used to “dress” façades, roofs, squares, and explore new relations with textile architecture. Applications in which this new ceramic textile has been used include drainable pavements, roof gardens, ceilings and suspended light-permeable façades.
The applications demonstrate the architectural opportunities of ceramic materials when they are conceived in industrialized systems. Being highly flexible and easy to move, the textile can be folded onto pallets for storage and transportation, where it takes up little space. The long strips make its installation easy, quick and economical. Installing a ceramic tile façade is similar to hanging a curtain: it merely requires stainless steel rails to be attached to the ceramic fabric in order to sustain it.
Comments
You must be logged in to post a comment.
The concept looks as the large matting with concrete blocks as a flooring for the Eastern Scheldt dam.