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Our client’s site has a lap pool surrounded by stone walls, planting, and fencing and looks to open fields and forest beyond. Our client values the openness of the location and wanted a shading solution that would be a compliment to the natural and open elements of the site.
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During our initial visit to the site we immediately began to explore and discuss traditional solutions to the shading challenge; a wooden structure of posts and beams covered with vines for shading; a cantilevered aluminum frame covered in fabric, etc. Because of the large area needing to be covered we conceptualized designing furniture fitted with personalized umbrellas that would move when the furniture and the people moved. These solutions all had a similar, unsatisfying feel and they didn’t really address the fundamental design challenge; providing shade while preserving openness.
We found ourselves feeling constrained and boxed in by conventional thinking and so we took a different approach to the project. “Maybe the shade or umbrella needs to be really high up in the air so the immediate surroundings and the view aren’t cluttered with structure” As soon as we approached it this way, the true challenge, and the true goal crystallized; We needed a solution that provided shade not structure. We wanted the SHADE of an umbrella, not the supporting structure of the umbrella.
Immediately the idea for the CLOUD was clear; we didn’t want or need any structure within the pool enclosure itself. We would put support poles outside the fence and beyond the immediate view and then suspend a shade form from tensioned cables strung between the poles. We wondered, “Can we place the poles really far away in the woods so all you’ll see is a shade on the cables with no visible means of support?” How high should the CLOUD be? Will we need more than one to provide enough shade? Where will the poles be placed? How big do the poles and cable need to be?
The idea was really clear but it was very conceptual so we began to study the individual elements of the CLOUD. We made a quick massing model of the site in SketchUp to study how the CLOUD SHADOW would move over the course of the day and whether the shade would be provided in the desired location. We quickly realized that due to the path of the sun, we would need more than one CLOUD in order to provide our client with enough flexibility to always get shade where they wanted it. If the clouds needed to move independently then we’d need to provide multiple support structures and the CLOUDS would need to be at different heights. We needed the CLOUDS to move along the cables but we didn’t want them moving haphazardly so we’d need hardware to hold them in place. And then there was the wind. How would the CLOUD and suspension cables respond to gusts of wind?
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The CLOUD was more successful than we had imagined and the client was pleased. We’re now working on the challenge of the support posts – Should they be minimal or a statement?