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Aficionados of modern poured-concrete
design were in for a rude awakening when they heard NJIT Assistant
Prof. Matt Burgermaster’s presentation at the 64th annual meeting of the
Society of Architectural Historians.
"Edison's "Single Pour System:
Inventing Seamless Architecture" illustrated how Thomas Edison
invented and patented in 1917 an innovative construction system to mass produce
prefabricated and seamless concrete houses.
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Typically most people
associate this style of architectural design and type of building technology
with the European
avant-garde of the early 20th century.
Unknown to many people, however, is that
many Edison houses remain standing in towns surrounding West Orange, New
Jersey, where Edison's factory was located and is now a National Historic
Park. On the park grounds is even a prototype of Edison's concrete
house.
"Edison's one-of-a-kind system was
patented for the purpose of building a single, repeatable structure without any
parts, with a single act of construction," said Burgermaster, "And,
remarkably, 100 years later many of these houses remain standing."
This paper analyzed Edison's invention of a
single-pour system for concrete construction as a novel application of this
material's dynamic behavior and speculated on its role in the development of a
type of integrated building anatomy that, perhaps inadvertently, also invented
the idea of a seamless architecture.
Originally motivated by the objective of
providing a cost-effective prototype for the working-class home, this early
experiment in mass-production was one of Modernism's first attempts to
construct a building with a single material.
Edison's 1917 patent proposed a
building-sized mold that leveraged the intrinsically dynamic capacity of
concrete to form itself into a variety of shapes and sizes, limited only by the
design of its framework. The invention's potential efficiencies resided
in the distribution of this material as a continuous flow through an entire
building instead of being confined to the prefabrication of its constituent
parts.
By physically integrating all interior and
exterior building components and their associated functions of structure,
enclosure, and infrastructure within a single, monolithic concrete cast, all
aspects of assembly were eliminated. It was a whole without any parts—a
building without joints.
This radical proposition - a seamless
architecture—was built by Edison before it was conceptualized by the European
avant-garde (such as Le Corbusier and the Bauhaus) with whom it later became
associated. While they imagined concrete as a material without a history
or author—one well-suited to industrialized modes of production—and
aestheticized such autonomy and anonymity as a material truth, Edison's
single-pour system matter-of-factly proposed an alternative causal relationship
between material and form.
Its physical seamlessness was not a
representation of architecture as an idealized, machine-made object, but was an
effect of actual material behavior. As such, this technological invention not
only delivered an innovative construction method, but also an alternative way
of thinking about the material itself.
"I don't think this research on
Edison's invention offers grounds for anyone to call those European architects
copycats. As anyone in a creative field knows, sometimes these things are
just in the air and like minds can be said to think alike," said
Burgermaster. "Edison's approach to invention remains as radical
today as it was a century ago. It's been very interesting finding this
body of work and making it visible. My hope is that this 'lost' chapter in
the early history of concrete construction will demonstrate that Edison not
only left a mark on the field of architecture right here in our back-yard, but
that his unique approach to design thinking offers a model for how today's
architects and designers can add value to the process of technological
problem-solving."