From Aqualungs to the Eden Project: a history of closed systems
What do outer space capsules, submarines and office buildings have in
common? Each was conceived as a closed system--a self-sustaining
physical environment demarcated from its surroundings by a boundary
prohibiting the transfer of matter or energy. As partial reconstructions
of the world in time and space, closed systems identify and implement
the basic materials necessary for the sustenance of life.
From the space program to countercultural architectural groups
experimenting with autonomous living, The Architecture of Closed
Worlds documents a disciplinary transformation and the rise of a new
environmental consciousness. It presents an archive of 39 prototypes
from 1928 to the present, creating a genealogy of closed-resource
structures. These include the FNRS Balloon (1931), Aqualung (1943),
House of the Future (1956), Disney's EPCOT (1966), Bios 3 (1972), Rocky
Mountain Institute (1982) and the EDEN Project (2000). Prototypes are
presented in archival images with new analysis and illustrations. The
book also showcases a timeline of the 39 prototypes that illuminates the
ways in which they have contributed to the idea of net-zero or
zero-energy in the contemporary discourse on sustainability.