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Det Kongelige Akademi – Arkitektur, Design, Konservering

Philip de Langes Allé 10
1435 Copenhagen K

info@kglakademi.dk
+45 4170 1500

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Detail: Red room with weaved structure expanded from the ceiling and on walls

Shimoni Slave Cave

Cave_bureau in collaboration with Professor Phil Ayres and Jack Young, Chair for Biohybrid Architecture at the Royal Danish Academy, Copenhagen, Denmark.

The rattan weave structure on display transposes a section of the Shimoni Slave Caves at 1:1 using the ancient Kagome weaving technique. The Shimoni caves are situated 75km south of Mombasa in the coastal town of Shimoni in Kwale county, next to the border with Tanzania. The Shimoni caves are a site that has witnessed traumatic acts under Imperial Colonialism, having been used as holding pens for hundreds of thousands, if not millions of slaves, shipped from the East African coast to the middle East during the 19th Century. The weave reimagines this space of trauma as a space for repair and healing, uncovering forgotten histories whilst simultaneously reconfiguring the surrounding space of the British Pavilion.

 

Red room with weaved structure expanded from the ceiling and on walls
Shimoni Slave Cave
Detail: Red room with weaved structure expanded from the ceiling and on walls
Shimoni Slave Cave

The weaving technique, based on a tri-hexagonal lattice, embeds principled methods for generating double curvature through the replacement of hexagons with different polygons. This allows complex geometries to be approximated using straight strips of material. In providing rational and principled ways to produce complex geometry without needing to cut or form components to the target geometry, the technique offers tantalising possibilities for architectural fabrication without the need for mechanical or chemical fixings – at least within the structural lattice. At the Chair for Biohybrid Architecture, this is being actively researched in the context of solid-timber gridshells through the Kagome Architectures project, funded by a 5-year Carlsberg Foundation Semper Ardens Accomplish grant.

The weave was originally conceived and produced by the Chair for Biohybrid Architecture in collaboration with Cave_bureau and Lousiana Museum of Modern Art (Denmark) for the exhibition Cave_bureau – The Anthropocene Museum in 2023, which formed part of The Architect’s Studio series.

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Chair for Biohybrid Architecture
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Det Kongelige Akademi – Arkitektur, Design, Konservering

Philip de Langes Allé 10
1435 Copenhagen K

info@kglakademi.dk
+45 4170 1500

Find vej
Tilgængelighedserklæring

18975734
5798009814210