Kengo Kuma combines bamboo with carbon fibre to create "material for the future"
Bamboo and carbon fibre can be used together to build earthquake-proof architecture, says Japanese architect Kengo Kuma, whose Bamboo Ring is installed at the V&A for London Design Festival.
Kuma has combined the two materials to create an installation in the John Madejski Garden at the V&A for this year's London Design Festival.
Called Bamboo Ring, the structure shows how rings of bamboo and carbon fibre can be woven together to create extremely strong, self-supporting structures.
Speaking to Dezeen and other journalists at a launch event, Kuma said he thinks this is "the material of the future".
"This is a new materiality that we can try to bring to the city," he stated, before suggesting that it could be used to make buildings in Japan more resistant to natural disasters like the Great East Japan Earthquake and resulting tsunami in 2011. "Both materials are very light," he said, "but wood is not resistant enough in an earthquake. By combining it with these carbon fibres we can create a new kind of strength."
Kuma created Bamboo Ring in collaboration with Ejiri Structural Engineers, as well as his Kengo Kuma Laboratory at The University of Tokyo.
Curated by Clare Farrow, the installation is located in a pool of water in the V&A's garden courtyard. It takes the form of a giant doughnut that is raised up on one side to create an arch.
The basic component of the structure is a two-metre-diameter ring, made by combining ...
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