Cardboard Sound Box (A place for listening) |
Thursday, 12 April 2007 |

Ikea pack furniture in it. Gehry has made furniture from it. Now
architects are shaping spaces with it. Is there any limit to the
creative re-use of corrugated cardboard? With its unique physical
consistency, its decidedly axial strength, and its deadening acoustic
absorption, corrugated cardboard has many inherent qualities. As such
it was the perfect material for this particular sound installation:
Made from 720 half square sheets of 7mm thick corrugated cardboard,
stacked in 360 layers, this cavernous sound space is set within a 2.5m
cube. As a space for listening to and experiencing music, the initial
concept for the design developed from the architect’s ambition to
create a strong spatial intensity and a distinct internal atmosphere.
With an irregular free-form interior set within a regular cubic volume,
the object has a profound duality. Made from one material it also has
an implied solidity that strengthens the architect’s distinction
between inside and out – a distinction that is heightened when the full
acoustic ambience is experienced from within.
Cutting the cardboard took three working days, and assembly just one.
The structure sits under its own dead weight, without any fixings or
glue. And, for those of a technical persuasion, a simple calculation
reveals that the combined compression of the 360 layers of cardboard is
20mm over the 2.5m height, or an average of 500ths of a millimetre per
sheet. All services are integrated within the stack, including cable
runs and apertures for the six-speaker surround sound system. R. G.
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