Bone-Like Plastic Structures Form Biodegradeable Temporary Pavilions With "Osteobotics"

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Architecture can be built with compressive elements and with tensile elements, but few materials have the ability to be stretched and also retain compressive strength. In a new project from Architectural Association DRL students Soulaf Aburas, Maria Velasquez, Giannis Nikas, and Mattia Santi, one of those materials, Polycaprolactone, a biodegradable polyester, is used to create framework from temporary pavilions and installations. Constructed using programmable robotic arms, the resulting product is a joint-less, self-supporting mono-material that shares a visual similarity to the structure of bones - giving the project its name, Osteobotics.

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Cite: Patrick Lynch. "Bone-Like Plastic Structures Form Biodegradeable Temporary Pavilions With "Osteobotics"" 06 Dec 2015. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/778099/bone-like-plastic-structures-form-biodegradeable-temporary-pavilions-with-osteobotics> ISSN 0719-8884

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