Prefabricated Architecture
When architects such as Jean Prouvé and Charles Eames began experimenting with buildings made using off-the-shelf components following the second World War, little did they know that technology would one day allow buildings to be created from kits cut by a computer anywhere in the world. Architonic looks at some of the more radical examples of contemporary prefabricated architecture, and the materials and technologies making these possible.
July 23, 2012 | 10:00 pm CUT

A pile of prefabricated concrete beams form the structure of Antón García- Abril’s Hemeroscopium house Antón García- Abril 2008 Photo: courtesy Ensamble Studio

A huge granite slab, which the architects wryly refer to as ‘the G-point,’ acts as a visual expression of the gravitational forces holding the structure together Antón García- Abril 2008 Photo: courtesy Ensamble Studio

Extensive glazing contrasts with the raw monumentality of the concrete components Antón García- Abril 2008 Photo: courtesy Ensamble Studio

Alejandro Soffia and Gabriel Rudolphy’s SIP Panel House is built entirely from structural insulated panels Alejandro Soffia and Gabriel Rudolphy 2011 Photographer: Felipe Fontecilla

Internal dimensions are based on multiples of the wall panel’s width Alejandro Soffia and Gabriel Rudolphy 2011 Photographer: Felipe Fontecilla

Only two sizes of panels were used in the house: wall panels measuring 122 x 244 x 11.4 mm, and split-level panels measuring 122 x 488 x 21 mm Alejandro Soffia and Gabriel Rudolphy 2011 Photographer: Felipe Fontecilla

Benthem Crouwel’s extension to the Las Palmas building in Rotterdam looks out over the surrounding docklands Benthem Crouwel Architekten 2008 Photograph: Jannes Linders

The penthouse perches on top of a renovated shipbuilders workshop, originally designed in 1953 Benthem Crouwel Architekten 2008 Photograph: Jannes Linders

Inside the double-height boardroom Benthem Crouwel Architekten 2008 Photograph: Jannes Linders

The Cube is an itinerant restaurant designed by Italian architects Park Associati for Electrolux. Seen here at the Royal Festival Hall in London Park Associati 2011 Photographer: Andrea Martiradonna

An aluminium surface with laser-cut pattern wraps around the restaurant’s faceted exterior Park Associati 2011 Photographer: Andrea Martiradonna

The Cube has been travelling to different European cities. It is assembled from prefabricated parts, stays for three months and is then disassembled before moving on Park Associati 2011 Photographer: Andrea Martiradonna

Users also download instructions of how to assemble the different kits, which require no additional building equipment 00:/ ongoing Photo courtesy 00:/

The WikiHouse is assembled from a kit that can be downloaded and cut from plywood sheets using a CNC milling machine 00:/ ongoing Photo courtesy 00:/

A computer-controlled milling machine cuts sections for the frames from standard sheets of locally available material 00:/ ongoing Photo courtesy 00:/
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