The Museum of Modern Art
and MoMA PS1 announce The Living (David Benjamin) as the winner the 15th
edition of Young Architects Program (YAP) in New York.
The winning project,
Hy-Fi, opens at MoMA PS1 in Long
Island City
in late June. Using biological technologies combined with cutting-edge
computation and engineering to create new building materials, The Living will
use a new method of bio-design, resulting in a structure that is 100% organic
material.
The structure
temporarily diverts the natural carbon cycle to produce a building that grows
out of nothing but earth and returns to nothing but earth—with almost no waste,
no energy needs, and no carbon emissions. This approach offers a new vision for
society’s approach to physical objects and the built environment.
It also offers a new
definition of local materials, and a direct relationship to New
York state agriculture and innovation culture, New York City artists and non-profits, and Queens
community gardens. Hy-Fi is a circular tower of organic and reflective bricks,
which were designed to combine the unique properties of two new materials.
The organic bricks
are produced through an innovative combination of corn stalks (that otherwise
have no value) and specially-developed living root structures, a process that
was invented by Ecovative, an innovative company that The Living is
collaborating with. The reflective bricks are produced through the
custom-forming of a new daylighting mirror film invented by 3M. The reflective
bricks are used as growing trays for the organic bricks, and then they are
incorporated into the final construction before being shipped back to 3M for
use in further research.
The organic bricks
are arranged at the bottom of the structure and the reflective bricks are
arranged at the top to bounce light down on the towers and the ground. The
structure inverts the logic of load-bearing brick construction and creates a
gravity-defying effect—instead of being thick and dense at the bottom, it is
thin and porous at the bottom. The structure is calibrated to create a cool
micro-climate in the summer by drawing in cool air at the bottom and pushing
out hot air at the top.
The structure
creates mesmerizing light effects on its interior walls through reflected
caustic patterns. Hy-Fi offers a familiar—yet completely new—structure in the
context of the glass towers of the New York City skyline and the brick construction of the
MoMA PS1 building. And overall, the structure offers shade, color, light,
views, and a future-oriented experience that is designed to be refreshing,
thought-provoking, and full of wonder and optimism.







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