Dragaera

OT: Totally cool, Light Transmitting Concrete

Tue Mar 23 13:38:07 PST 2004

This is utterly off topic, but I just ran across this, and found it to
be just amazing cool.  And isn't an OT post that isn't political nice
once in a while?

There are pictures, go look.  Seriously.  This stuff is just neat.

And then let's go to phase two.  The fiber optics could be hooked up
to a computer, and patterns could be made to appear on the wall, in
colour and motion.  Or cameras hooked up, and little screens, and
eventually, as technology advances, you could have walls that
"disappear" with a flip of a switch.

The future is now.   This stuff just makes me giggly.

http://optics.org/articles/news/10/3/10/1

Light transmitting concrete is set to go on sale later this year.

The days of dull, grey concrete could be about to end. A Hungarian
architect has combined the world’s most popular building material with
optical fiber from Schott to create a new type of concrete that
transmits light. 


A wall made of “LitraCon” allegedly has the strength of traditional
concrete but thanks to an embedded array of glass fibers can display a
view of the outside world, such as the silhouette of a tree, for
example. 

“Thousands of optical glass fibers form a matrix and run parallel to
each other between the two main surfaces of every block,” explained
its inventor Áron Losonczi. “Shadows on the lighter side will appear
with sharp outlines on the darker one. Even the colours remain the
same. This special effect creates the general impression that the
thickness and weight of a concrete wall will disappear.”

The hope is that the new material will transform the interior
appearance of concrete buildings by making them feel light and airy
rather than dark and heavy. 

Losonczi, a 27 year old architect from Csongrád recently came up with
the idea while he was studying at the Royal University College of Fine
Arts in Stockholm, Sweden. After demonstrating the material at design
exhibitions all over Europe he has now formed a company to
commercialize the concept. 

His new company, also called LitraCon, is now optimizing its
manufacturing methods and hopes to start selling prefabricated blocks
of the material later this year. 

“In theory, a wall structure built out of the light-transmitting
concrete can be a couple of meters thick as the fibers work without
any loss in light up to 20 m,” explained Losonczi. “Load-bearing
structures can also be built from the blocks as glass fibers do not
have a negative effect on the well-known high compressive strength of
concrete. The blocks can be produced in various sizes with embedded
heat isolation too.”