Princeton Architectural Press on "Windswept"

Windswept is featured in a recent publication from Princeton Architectural Press: "Hypernatural"  (2015, Brownel, Swackhamer).

"By looking to nature as a teacher rather than simply as a source for raw materials, pioneers in the emerging biomimicry movement are developing design methods and materials to create intelligent buildings that emulate life itself."
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Inhabitat: Windswept is a Fascinating Kinetic Façade That Reveals the Direction of the Wind

Windswept is a fascinating interactive facade that moves in response to the wind, revealing the exact direction it's blowing at a specific location. Located on the exterior of the Randall Museum in San Francisco, Charles Sower's wind-driven kinetic installation is part art and part science experiment. His precision instrument showcases the complex interactions between the wind and the building and gives us insight into something that isn't normally invisible.

Arch daily: Windswept Installation / Charles Sowers Studios

Commissioned by the San Francisco Arts Commission for a permanent installation at the Randal Museum, Windswept, designed by Charles Sowers Studios, is a wind-driven kinetic facade that transforms a blank wall into an observational instrument that reveals the complex interactions between wind and environment. The design consists of 612 freely-rotating directional arrows, which serve as discrete data points indicating the direction of local flow within the larger phenomenon. More images and architects’ description after the break.