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By Sara Hart
Innovation and the oxymoron
The fact that concrete is opaque is one
of the indisputable physical attributes of the material. Of
all of its intriguing, variable features, opacity has always
been a given. Therefore, the concept of translucent concrete
seems more than an oxymoron; it would seem to be an impossibility.
And yet translucent concrete has been invented twice in the
past few years. Time magazine recently named LiTraCon (www.litracon.com),
a translucent concrete block, one of the coolest inventions
of 2004. [Also see RECORD, December 2004, page 281.]
(Apparently, the response to Times designation was so
overwhelming that the companys Web site collapsed from
a stampede of curiosity seekers. At press time, the site was
still down.)

Ricciottis
Seonyu footbridge in Seoul is a major innovation
in the use of ultra-high-strength concretein
this case, Ductal. It spans almost 400 feet,
is 14 feet wide, and yet the 4-foot-deep arch
supports a deck that is only a little more
than 1 inch thick. |

Photography: ©
Philippe Ruault |
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The material now trademarked as LiTraCon
was invented in 2001 by a young Hungarian architect, Áron
Losonczi, who combined concrete with an optical fiber from
Schott (www.us.schott.com)
to create building blocks that transmit light. The recipe
calls for thousands of fibers, which run side by side, transmitting
light between the two main surfaces in each block. Light rays
enter the fiber at one end and are guided along the core by
internal reflection, following all the bends in the fiber,
which they exit at the other end.
According to the manufacturer, a wall
created out of LiTraCon blocks can be quite thick, as the
fibers work almost without any loss of light up to 60 feet,
providing the same effect with both sunlight and electric
light. Shadows on the lighter side will appear with sharp
outlines on the darker one. Even colors of light are unaffected
by transmission. The blocks will be on the market later this
year.
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