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102
The Sphere Project -
Negotiate geometrical representations from design to
production
Klaus Bollinger
Bollinger + Grohmann Ingenieure
Manfred Grohmann
Bollinger + Grohmann Ingenieure
Oliver Tessmann
Bollinger + Grohmann Ingenieure
Abstract. The Sphere is a sculpture designed by Mario Bellini for the lobby of the
Deutsche Bank head office in Frankfurt, Germany. A spherical network with a
diameter of sixteen meters spans between the twintowers. This paper describes the
ollaborative design process of architects, engineers and contractor. The various
geometrical implications from design synthesis to fabrication and the exchange of
information between the different parties are discussed. The concept of a spherical
network was transformed into a series of sixty intersecting rings that act together
as one sculptural and structural object. The ring configuration is derived from an
evolutionary design process that includes geometrical and structural fitness
criteria. Evolutionary design, structural analysis and fabrication demanded
different geometrical representations that addressed the various constraints
emerging during design and construction.
1 Introduction
The Sphere is a sculpture designed by Mario Bellini for the lobby of the
Deutsche Bank head office in Frankfurt, Germany. The sculpture is one element of
a large-scale refurbishment that is set to turn the headquarters into an eco-friendly
high-rise building. In the competition phase the spherical network of threads was
represented by a texture mapping in a rendering. The image successfully conveyed
the design intent of Mario Bellini and suggested a spatial quality within the
entrance area.
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K. Bollinger, M. Grohmann, O. Tessmann
Figure 1: Early rendering with mapped structure. (Source: Mario Bellini Architects)
2 Geometry generation
The distribution of rings on the Sphere’s surface was the objective of a Genetic
Algorithm. The goal of the evolutionary design process was a configuration of
sixty rings that serve as a structural system, while at the same time providing an
even distribution of rings that do not intersect with two bridges that penetrate the
spherical surface. These requirements served as fitness criteria in a process of
automated generation of geometrical and structural models and their evaluation,
ranking and selection.
Figure 2: Every ring is based on a circle that is described by three spherical coordinates.
(Source: Bollinger + Grohmann)
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The Sphere Project
Figure 3: Two different ring orientations were investigated. Left: A ring which is derived
from a planar curve offset of the circle. Right: A ring as a cone segment derived from a
cone between the sphere center point and the circle. The former version was chosen because
it could be easily fabricated from sheet material whereas the second version requires
unrolling the single-curved surface. Nevertheless the different ring orientations of Version 1
created more complex ring intersections (Figure 4, Figure 5). (Source: Bollinger +
Grohmann)
Figure 4: Planar rings never fully intersect because of different plane orientation. (Source:
Bollinger + Grohmann)
105
K. Bollinger, M. Grohmann, O. Tessmann
Figure 5: Similar topology of circles but different ring orientation. Cone segments fully
intersect because every element is orientated towards the sphere’s center (Source: Bollinger
+ Grohmann).
Figure 6: Polygonized rings in RSTAB©. The flat steel bars are oriented towards
their circle center (Source: Bollinger + Grohmann).
Thus the circle intersection points were detected and the arcs between those
intersections were converted into polylines which guaranteed a sufficient
approximation of the original geometry. Nevertheless for the cross-section
orientation of the linear segments it was very important to maintain the
information of the initial circle, the element it is derived from since the flat bar
profiles were oriented towards the circle center point.
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The Sphere Project
The structural systems and the sculpture coalesce into one single geometrical
construct. No additional load bearing elements are necessary. The entire sphere is
supported by the two towers it connects and intersects with. In the evolutionary
process the overall deflection of the system is used as a fitness criteria to evaluate
the structural performance.
An even distribution of rings across the sphere is a requirement which opposes
structural demands. Hanging or standing arcs that span between the towers would
serve as a proper structure but result in clustering elements in one zone of the
sphere. This contradictory requirement became the second fitness criteria. It was
quantified by measuring the angles between the circle planes. All angles were
summed-up. A large number meaning wide angles between the rings and therefore
a better distribution across the sphere.
The third criteria related to the context of the sphere. Two bridges penetrate the
sculpture and improve the connection between the two towers. The rings should
not interfere with the required clearance for construction and use of the bridge.
Truncated rings would form threatening blades next to the circulation area. Thus
the number of rings that intersect the clearance were counted and bad fitness
values were assigned to individuals with a high number of collisions. The Genetic
algorithm delivered a suitable ring configuration which was approved by the
architects and became the basis for the subsequent design phases.
Figure 7: Three fitness criteria. Left: Deflection of the structure, Middle: Distribution of
rings, Right: Collisions btw. rings and bridge clearance (Source: Bollinger + Grohmann).
107
K. Bollinger, M. Grohmann, O. Tessmann
Figure 8: The Sphere with a configuration of sixty rings. Compared to the initial
visualization the Sphere is now comprised of fewer but more ordered elements. The
generative rules are recognizable (Source: Mario Bellini Architects).
The first full-scale mock-up made from flat steel bars revealed a geometrical
problem which did not seem so relevant in the digital model: The planar ring
surfaces were extruded in both normal directions to generate solids. Thus the ring
solids partially exceed the sphere volume. To avoid possible collisions the
geometry generating script was revised to limit the extrusion direction of the rings
towards the center of the sphere.
Figure 9: Different extrusion procedures from initial circle. Left: Extrusion in both
directions, Right: Extrusion in one direction (Source: Bollinger + Grohmann).
Every intersection of rings was analyzed individually. The primary and the
secondary rings were determined which means a primary ring stay continuous and
cuts the secondary ring.
The ring segments were laser-cut from sheet material. The trimmed edge was
subsequently miter milled to match the angle in which both rings intersect. Every
intersection is then welded to serve as a rigid connection within the overall
structure.
108