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  • Beijing Olympic Pool

    This structure is pretty amazing. Beijing National Aquatics Center:


    National Aquatics Center


    It looks blue, but it's green, and it's here. As big, eye-catching Olympics architecture goes, nothing may be as sustainable as the Beijing National Aquatics Center, or Water Cube, the latest cutting-edge building to open on the enormous construction site that is China. Taking the structure of soap bubbles as inspiration (and mimicking nature's way of filling 3-d space most efficiently), PTW Architects and Arup gave the $200 million Cube an elegant, light-weight design: a rectangular box covered in iridescent bubble wrap.

    But it does more than look cool. The 100,000 square meters of the Teflon-like translucent plastic ETFE that make up the building's bubble cladding allow in more solar heat than glass, making it easier to heat the building, and resulting in a 30 percent reduction in energy costs. That's especially important for a swimming pool, which requires an enormous amount of heating. (Though the building's ETFE was manufactured abroad, meaning more pollution in construction than would there have been with locally available materials, designers emphasize that the energy savings are substantial, equivalent to covering the roof in solar panels.)


    Air-tight, the futuristic LED-lit bubbles not only act as adjustable insulators, turning the building into a greenhouse, but also serve as storehouses for warm air that can be pumped into the Cube as needed. Though it's only .008 of an inch thick, ETFE, which has been used to a lesser extent in the UK's Eden Project and Germany's Allianz Arena can hold up to 300 times its weight. Without trussing, it can span greater distances than glass, and costs up to 70 percent less to install. Though critics say it will need frequent scrubbing (Beijing's grit had clearly left its mark on the building today), the material is billed as more self-cleaning than glass, and can be recycled.
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    Last edited by blm; 08-04-08, 03:34 PM.

  • #2
    i watch the making of it on Nat Geo channel. place is awesome.

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    • #3
      That's what made me look it up and post it.

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      • #4
        I got to watch that episode. Things like this really makes the US look stupid when it comes to energy.



        ^Shibby

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        • #5
          Originally posted by magdalena View Post
          I got to watch that episode. Things like this really makes the US look stupid when it comes to energy.



          ^Shibby
          not sure i agree with that one. china made this building for the world stage. they are the ultimate hypocrite really.

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          • #6
            I just re-read what I typed and it seems confusing. I have not watched it but really want to. The whole concept though was that something like this can easily be done... what else can be done?...

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            • #7
              lost me again shib.

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              • #8
                Did you read the part about using this concept to conserve heat energy? We (US) always seem incompetent in this category.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Shibby View Post
                  Did you read the part about using this concept to conserve heat energy? We (US) always seem incompetent in this category.
                  yes, my point is that we are far and away superior to china when it comes to the whole green movement. just because they build a building that makes them look good in front of the world doesn't make us seem stupid. it makes them look like huge hypocrites IMO. the US is far from what we should be, but china is just terrible when it comes to pollution etc..

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                  • #10
                    My point is, if we can do so much why can't we or don't we do the small things? Profit.

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by Shibby View Post
                      My point is, if we can do so much why can't we or don't we do the small things? Profit.
                      small things are being done every single day. the only thing that makes the news is negatives. saw something the other day about new skyscrapers and apartment buildings being built in America. the things they are doing is amazing. things like rain catchers as the whole roof of the building that is also a huge garden. buildings that pull in dirty air in city's and release clean air, almost as if they were trees. many cars are now so good with emissions that the air going into the front of the car is actually more polluted then when it comes out the exhaust pipe.

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                      • #12
                        That is all new info. I don't consider myself ignorant but I am also not highly informed. I would say I am the majority that good PR should connect with more.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Shibby View Post
                          That is all new info. I don't consider myself ignorant but I am also not highly informed. I would say I am the majority that good PR should connect with more.
                          its all shit that i have seen on discovery, science channel etc... there is also a new "green network". you probably have it since you have comcast. they have all these shows about new Homes being built that are "green".

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                          • #14
                            I will look for it. Although I haven't had comcast for about 8 months (armstrong) I pretty much have all the same channels so I will fine which ones they are.

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                            • #15
                              the green channel replaced the discovery health channel.

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