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Jellyfish House, Treasure Island, San Francisco model

IwamotoScott Architecture with proces22005-2006

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)
San Francisco, United States

A transformative prototype for reclaimed land, Jellyfish House was designed to take into account the particularities of Treasure Island, a former military base in the San Francisco Bay whose environmental hazards it addresses through a variety of means. By necessity, the proposed house does more than simply provide shelter; its exterior "skin" also absorbs and filters water, air, and UV light from the outside, merging technology into the building's very structure to adapt to its immediate environment. Solar panels, phase change materials, and sensor networks allow the skin to produce its own energy to insulate, heat, and cool the house automatically.

While the project is extremely technological, it does not rely on the digital. Rather, as the architects state, it "expands upon the notion of 'calm,' or ambient, technology, which suggests that the digital realm will ultimately recede to the background of our spaces and lived experience."

Jellyfish House was commissioned for the exhibition Open House: Architecture and Technology for Intelligent Living, organized by the Vitra Design Museum in Weil am Rhein, Germany, in collaboration with the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. The exhibition presented proposals for visions of how we might live in the future.

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  • Title: Jellyfish House, Treasure Island, San Francisco model
  • Creator Lifespan: Established 2000
  • Creator Nationality: American
  • Date Created: 2005-2006
  • Physical Dimensions: w1254.25 x h660.4 x d317.5 in (overall)
  • Type: architectural model
  • Rights: © IwamotoScott Architecture
  • External Link: SFMOMA
  • Medium: Nylon
  • architectural firm: IwamotoScott Architecture with proces2
  • Subject: San Francisco, United States
  • Place Part Of: United States
  • More Info: More About These Artists - SFMOMA
  • Credit Line: Accessions Committee Fund purchase
  • About the Artist: Lisa Iwamoto and Craig Scott founded IwamotoScott Architecture (ISAR) in 2000. Both received their master of architecture degrees from Harvard University and taught at the University of Michigan before settling in the Bay Area. Iwamoto is associate professor of architecture at UC Berkeley's School of Environmental Design, and Scott is associate professor of architecture at California College of the Arts in San Francisco. Balanced between residential, institutional, and conceptual designs, IwamotoScott's architecture is geared toward the future: their projects seem intended for a coming age. As interested in research and technology as they are in architectural forms, ISAR blend innovative materials and experimental approaches into their designs. Many of their projects, including their Hydro-Net concept for the San Francisco of the future and their Jellyfish House, designed to perch on Treasure Island, in the San Francisco Bay, aspire to reflect a seamless relationship between the built environment and the natural world. In these and other projects, structural elements function in multiple ways: a structure's exterior may act as a water filtration system, or an interior wall may serve not only to divide but to illuminate a space.
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA)

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