How do you protect buildings in a country bedevilled by earthquakes? Instead of using steel or concrete, a Japanese textile firm turned to carbon-fibre ropes. The company, Komatsu Seiren, had developed a high-tensile twine from carbon-fibre composite.
Seeking to reinforce the structure of its new showroom and laboratory in Nomi, it asked Japanese architects Kengo Kuma and Associates to use rods of the material to anchor it. "Since the carbon fibre is tough and pliant, they approached us with an idea of utilising it to render the building quake-resistant," says Shun Horiki, the project's lead architect. The team attached 1,031 rods to the roof and tethered them to the ground. "The principle is quite straightforward," says Horiki. "When the building jolts left, the rod on the right pulls it back, and vice versa. A curtain of 2,778 rods inside adds a further layer of stability.
"The carbon mesh inside and the drape outside help restrain the horizontal force of the earthquake," he says.
Before attaching the rods, Kengo Kuma and Associates enhanced the strength of the building's parapet in order to resist tensile stress and placed anchors around the structure to prevent the ground from rising up.
This is the first time that carbon fibre has been used in this way, but Horiki believes the rods could also be applied to flexible structures such as wooden buildings that "tend to sway horizontally".
This article was originally published by WIRED UK