Architexture: textiles go constructional
Its roots may lie in transient structures, but contemporary textile architecture, with all its creative, functional and ecological possibilities, is definitely here to stay.
April 20, 2015 | 10:00 pm CUT

Constructed in just eight months, GMP Architekten and Nüssli International’s show-stopping 25,000-seater Baku Crystal Hall in Azerbaijan features an angular facade made of reflective PVC-PES mesh fabric and PVC-coated polyester



Shigeru Ban’s Curtain Wall House in Tokyo is defined by its curtain-like, fabric ‘walls’, which the architect likens to traditional shoji screens; photo: Hiroyuki Hirai


Made of Sefar’s Tenara fabric, architect Nikolai Kugel’s visually intriguing canopy over the Metzergasse in Buchs, Switzerland, was wind-tunnel-tested before installation and is fully retractable

Respected Norwegian office chose to collaborate with leading high-tech-membrane manufacturer MDT-tex when it came to shaping the exterior landscape of its new King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture in Saudi Arabia



The Baku Crystal Hall’s facade consists of mesh-fabric and coated-polyester diamond and triangular-shaped panels across an aluminium frame, together with 9,500 LED lights that illuminate the stadium at night
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