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By Sara Hart
Meanwhile, Bill Price, assistant professor
of architecture at the University of Houston, has developed
a similar translucent concrete, which currently exists only
in a few prototypes but will go commercial when its
ready. In contrast to LiTraCon, Prices Pixel products
use polymer and crushed glass to transmit light, rather than
fiber optics. The effect is startling. His goal is to create
not one product, but a series of translucent concrete productspanels,
bricks, and blocks. (LiTraCon will only be available in blocks
when it first launches.)

The proposed Pixel
Chapel (left and below) by Bill Price with
Scott McGhee will be constructed with one
of Prices translucent concrete products,
Pixel Panels. |

Images: Courtesy
Bill Price |
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What makes Price different from other
innovators is his approach to research and development. Hes
methodicalpart academic, part rational practitioner,
part lab rat. He began his investigation by rethinking the
traditional ingredients of the material, initially as research
and development director at the Office of Metropolitan Architecture,
Rem Koolhaass architecture firm in Rotterdam. In
1998, I broke the research vector down into multiple directions.
I took each ingredient associated with concrete and asked
it to carry light, he explains. The ingredients
are binder/additives, reinforcement, aggregate, and formwork.
He took each component and either altered it or replaced it
with another. Iteration meets trial and error.
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