50-Foot-Tall Buckminster Fuller ?Fly?s Eye? Dome to Be Erected in Arkansas
One of Buckminster Fuller?s visionary housing structures is set to be erected at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas. The 50-foot structure, known as the ?Fly?s Eye Dome? is the largest of only three original prototypes hand-fabricated by Fuller during his lifetime.
3D computer rendering of Buckminster?s Fly?s Eye Dome as it will appear on the North Lawn at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. (View from Early 20th Century Gallery Bridge.). Image Courtesy of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art
One of Buckminster Fuller?s visionary housing structures is set to be erected at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas. The 50-foot structure, known as the ?Fly?s Eye Dome? is the largest of only three original prototypes hand-fabricated by Fuller during his lifetime.Inspired by the shape of an insect?s eye, the structure was designed by Fuller as an affordable, portable home of the future. The dome features 61 openings with its geodesic framework, which were intended to hold solar panels and water collection systems that could allow the dome to be self-sufficient.Designed in 1961, the 50-foot dome was displayed during the Los Angeles Bicentennial in 1981 before spending the next three decades in storage. In early 2013, the dome was acquired by architectural historian Robert Rubin, who restored it to show at Festival International d?Art in Toulouse, France, in the summer of that year.Now, it has found a permanen...
3D computer rendering of Buckminster?s Fly?s Eye Dome as it will appear on the North Lawn at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. (View from Early 20th Century Gallery Bridge.). Image Courtesy of Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art
One of Buckminster Fuller?s visionary housing structures is set to be erected at Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art in Bentonville, Arkansas. The 50-foot structure, known as the ?Fly?s Eye Dome? is the largest of only three original prototypes hand-fabricated by Fuller during his lifetime.Inspired by the shape of an insect?s eye, the structure was designed by Fuller as an affordable, portable home of the future. The dome features 61 openings with its geodesic framework, which were intended to hold solar panels and water collection systems that could allow the dome to be self-sufficient.Designed in 1961, the 50-foot dome was displayed during the Los Angeles Bicentennial in 1981 before spending the next three decades in storage. In early 2013, the dome was acquired by architectural historian Robert Rubin, who restored it to show at Festival International d?Art in Toulouse, France, in the summer of that year.Now, it has found a permanen...
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