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The 'Reading
Room' for New Materials
10/9/2006
By
Tudor Van Hampton

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Material
ConneXion has libraries in New York, Bangkok, Cologne and Milan.
(Photo:Material ConneXion) |
Running late on a project and short on inspiration?
At Material ConneXion, designers can jump onto the Internet or visit
one of four international libraries showcasing 3,000 of the most
intriguing substances on Earth. People have been more interested
in innovation, says Andrew Dent, who is the firms vice
president in charge of the physical library of materials.
Founded in 1997 by George M. Beylerian, a
furniture designer, Material ConneXion is now a busy clearinghouse
that reviews about 50 new products every month and works with designers
to find the right stuff for projects ranging from clock radios to
buildings. Manufacturers are invited to submit new products, but
not every sample gets through the door. Each is scrutinized by a
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Dent says the panelists know a fair
amount about which materials should be featured in the company
library. As chief coordinator of this effort, he has a Ph.D. in
materials science from the University of Cambridge. Prior to joining
the company in 2001, he provided private consulting to designers
at Rolls Royce, the Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency (DARPA)
and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). We
know whats new and interesting, he says confidently.
The library, which can be accessed on the
Internet at www.materialconnexion.com
for $200 per year, is located in New York, Bangkok, Cologne and
Milan. It serves about 2,000 members who pay at least $450 for a
basic subscription fee and $15,000 or more for large corporations.
Its staff also performs private consulting work for an extra fee.
Dent wont disclose who in the construction industry uses the
service but notes that some of the librarys largest clients
include Nike, Target and Aveda. We havent worked with
a lot of construction companies, he says. Mostly, it
comes through the architect.
New research and development over the last
10 years has produced many dazzling products that have found their
way into everyday life, from polypropylene-foam acoustical panels
in upscale hotel rooms to silicone oven mitts in moms kitchen.
But designers seldom have time to sort out the old from the new.
In the last 10 years, our company has rode the crest of that
wave, Dent explains.
Material ConneXions reading room
includes many innovative construction materials, including self-cleaning
glass, cement and paint. Dent says these new materials typically
employ titanium dioxide, whose technology has been around
for years. It catalyzes surface particles using air and sunlight.
Then, it allows water to wash away smudges during a rainstorm. It
works, but its level of efficacy is debatable. You dont
have to clean it so many times, but you still have to clean it,
Dent says.
Other exotics on Dents radar are ceramic
paints that insulate walls and bendable concrete that resists cracking.
The barrier to market is high. For every 1,000 inventions,
you probably end up with 10 for use in the construction industry,
he says.
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