PET Wall

August 31, 2011
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Luminous repurposed polyethylene curtain

Light is essential to the realization of architecture, yet in the process of design and construction it is commonly an afterthought. Not only is the source of light important for the quality of illumination within a space, but also the materials used to capture, filter, and redirect the light.

The PET Wall is a self-supporting, luminous curtain composed of repurposed polyethylene terephthalate (PET) bottles and integrated light-emitting diode (LED) nets. The lightweight structure makes use of a widely disposed post-consumer product due to its advantageous structural and light-filtering properties. Like head lamp or light fixture lenses, the particular thermoformed geometries of these transparent bottles convey and disperse illumination efficiently while obscuring glare. The result is a thickened surface comprised by modular, tactile light nodes with various possibilities for programmability and interaction.

The PET Wall is designed to expand the potential of second use materials into the building scale. Consisting of thousands of post-consumer PET bottles arrayed in stacked honeycomb modules, as well as integrated LED light nets cycling through gradually undulating sequences of warm and cool white illumination, this new self-supporting “second surface” attempts to inspire a dual reading in which the viewer is simultaneously conscious of the reuse of a commonly disposed product as well as the ephemeral atmosphere it creates when arrayed as a large, expansive light lens.

Contact: Transstudio, Saint Paul, MN, USA.

For more information, see Transmaterial 3: A Catalog of Materials that Redefine our Physical Environment

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