Real Estate News and Advice
November 16, 2009


Search Realty Times
 





Today's Insider REALTOR Secret



Let Webcast City webcast your message.









NEED HELP?

Click for Live Support


Call: 214-353-6980








Concrete Cast In New Light

Mix some glass fibers into the crushed stone, cement and water and new light is shed on a centuries old building product.

Hungarian architect Aron Losonczi several years ago came up with translucent concrete which gives mere mortals super vision -- sort of.

You can't actually see through the new variety of concrete, but is does allow light to pass through -- even while maintaining the same strength and durability of the old fashioned opaque variety. That means, with proper lighting, you can see shadows and outlines of images through the material.

Largely experimental and currently too costly to mass produce, translucent concrete is being readied for market by an Aachen, Germany company called LiTraCon for "light transmitting concrete." The firm says the product should be ready for market by the end of 2004.

The new material reveals just how sexy something as mundane as concrete can get in "Liquid Stone: New Architecture in Concrete," a National Building Museum exhibit in Washington, D.C.

The exhibit celebrates the versatility of concrete -- after water, "the second most widely consumed substance on Earth," and reveals it as a favored material among architects, engineers and others who seek versatility and strength in a building material.

Concrete, says the museum, is the stuff of artists, a paradoxical material that begins in a fluid state and must be molded, textured and shaped before it provides strength in both form and function.

Found more and more often in and around the home (especially kitchens and baths as well as out of doors and as a framing material), concrete can be colored, patterned and otherwise rendered to meet a host of building needs.

Translucence gives it yet more versatility, especially in architectural design, adding a certain lightness of being. Translucent concrete is strong enough for traditional use and it can be strengthened still more.

So far its use has been largely demonstrative.

By day, thin sheets of translucent concrete in a sidewalk in Stureplan, Stockholm, appear like any other sidewalk concrete. By night subterranean lights give it an ethereal glow.

In Fruängenchurch, Stockholm, a church constructed with translucent concrete walls displays the permanently moving shadows of trees outside in a symbolic presentation of light transcending the boundaries of heavy stone.

In the home, the material could be used for myriad purposes -- countertops lighted from below, walls, flooring, stairwells that need natural lighting in a power outage and a host of other areas.

Along with a host of visions both real and imagined created with concrete, the exhibit also displays a new self-reinforcing concrete which does not need steel reinforcement for added strength.

According to Liquid Stone's sponsor, French firm The Lafarge Group, the synthetic fibers in "Ductal" gives the concrete brand the flexibility and strength of steel and may one day make the metal obsolete in building design.

The museum's "Liquid Stone" exhibit runs until Jan. 23 and admission is free.

Published: July 14, 2004

Use of this article without permission is a violation of federal copyright laws.




Broderick Perkins parlayed a career in old-school journalism into a contemporary digital news service that really hits home.

The award-winning consumer journalist, originally from Wilmington, DE, is founder, publisher and executive editor of the bootstrap DeadlineNews Group, a Silicon Valley-based editorial content and consulting service specializing in residential real estate, consumer news and related editorial consulting services.

The DeadlineNews Group includes the website, DeadlineNews.com, offering real estate editorial content and consulting services, and its back shop, the Deadline Newsroom, an open house on news that really hits home.

Perkins obtained his formal journalism education from University of Delaware and a journalism boot camp, the Institute of Journalism Education at the University of California-Berkeley. He went on to 20 years of service as a daily newspaper journalist at the Wilmington, DE News Journal and San Jose, CA Mercury News.

Perkins covered housing on the San Jose Mercury News reporting team which earned a General News Reporting Pulitzer Prize in 1989 for coverage of the Loma Prieta earthquake.

He has also produced real estate, consumer and small business content for the Wall Street Journal, Los Angeles Times, RealtyTimes.com, Nolo.com, Better Homes and Gardens, the National Association of Realtors, Homestore/Move and Intuit/Quicken among more than three dozen publications.

In addition to managing the DeadlineNews Group, Perkins most recently served as chief editorial consultant for Nolo's Essential Guide To Buying Your First Home, Nolo, and writes real estate television scripts for RealtyTimes.com.




View Local Market Conditions.



Real Estate News Network

You must enable Javascript to view the Video content and Navigation on this site.





Mortgage Rates
30 Year Fixed: 4.91%
15 Year Fixed: 4.36%
1 Year Adj: 4.46%
(U.S. Weekly Averages)

Today's Headlines


Spotlight


Today's Insider REALTOR Secret



Agent Publicity | Market Conditions Interview | Local Market Conditions | Video Newsletter | Article Index | Terms & Conditions | Privacy | Contact Us

Copyright © 2004 Realty Times®. All Rights Reserved.