• 01

General information

  • Home page
    www.architen.com
  • Location address
    Duxford
  • Location country
    United Kingdom
  • Name of the client/building owner
    Trustees of the Imperial War Museum
  • Function of building
    Exhibition
  • Type of application of the membrane
    internal
  • Primary function of the tensile structure
    • Space defining elements

Description

As part of the new £25 million AirSpace development project, Architen Landrell won the contract to install an impressive 225 metre long fabric ribbon structure at the Imperial War Museum in Duxford.
Known as The Flight Path, this structure not only provides a dramatic visual cue to lead visitors through the exhibition, but is used in a number of ways to enhance the displays themselves. Presenting large bold printed graphics, its surface forms a projection screen for audio visual presentations and a back drop for effects lighting, which helps to identify distinct areas of the exhibition, giving different areas a sense of enclosure and a surface on which to present various materials or aircraft components.
Created from a stretch material made from Lycra, and then dyed and printed with the aeroplane silhouettes, the fabric was chosen to be as malleable and flexible as possible. ‘Socks’ of the fabric were made and then stretched over a steel frame to create a perfectly smooth and continuous ribbon.
The Flight Path was conceived as a 1.8 metre wide undulating, twisting ribbon that passes in three-dimensional form down the length of the first floor gallery. Starting at the main entrance on the ground floor, the structure rises up the stairway to the main exhibition space, and performs a number of aerobatic manoeuvres as it flows throughout the hanger.

Description of the environmental conditions

Material of the cover

  • Cable-net/Fabric/Hybrid/Foil
    Fabric
  • Type (code)
    Stretch Fabric

Main dimensions and form

Duration of use

Involved companies

Editor