Sometimes looking at a piece of design or art, I wonder how is that bloody working? The workings of a mechanical mind find the solution, sometimes i assume and that’s the mother of what we know. This particular piece is years old now, but only now have i found out the simple answer to ‘how’? Hats off to the studio.
Explanation:
The directors of the National Malus (crab-apple) Collection invited Heatherwick Studio to develop the design of a structure called the Sitooterie for their site in Essex. Derived from the Scottish, a ’sitooterie’ is a small building in which to literally “sit oot”.
The structure is a cube punctured by over 5000 long thin windows that project from all its surfaces and lift it off the ground. The cube, which measures 2.4 x 2.4 metres, is precision-machined from 15mm anodised aluminium and the windows are 18mm square-section aluminium tubes glazed with transparent orange acrylic.
As the long thin windows all point at the exact centre of the cube, it only takes a single light source, located at this central point, to send light through every tube, causing the windows to glow orange. A small number of them also project into the cube to form seating.
To check out their mind bending stuff – http://www.heatherwick.com/
The Rolling Bridge in London is another master piece – it’s on the opening page.


