Outside In - CODAworx

Outside In

Submitted by IKD

Client: Heritage Museums and Gardens

Location: Sandwich, MA, United States

Completion date: 2015

Artwork budget: $20,000

Project Team

Architect

Yugon Kim

ikd

Overview

Outside-In is a winning proposal for the Secret Shelters Exhibition at the Heritage Museum and Gardens in Sandwich, MA, installed for the summer of 2015 by IKD, a design firm based in Cambridge, MA operating at the intersection of art, architecture, material, and making.
Inverting the traditional relationship of a typical tree bench, where one sits with their back to the tree, Outside-In instead refocuses the viewer's attention toward the Heritage's cherished tulip tree, creating an intimate space between the viewer and what is being viewed.

Goals

Outside-In inverts our usual experience of wood construction. One of the tree's most recognizable characteristics, the bark, remains visible but is rotated to face inward in the same fashion as the orientation of the installation. The "outside-in" configuration of the bark allows for the utilization of the already cut edge of the waste slab to create the finished edge of each TwMU , or Timber waste Modular Unit (patent pending).
Outside-In was created entirely from waste resulting from the manufacturing and processing of commercial timber products. Waste wood trimmed from logs in the normal milling process as they are rough sawn into lumber, is then cut, rotated, and reassembled to form Outside-In's basic structural unit.
Traditionally when a tree is processed into building material, approximately 38% of the processed log is waste that is then used in the creation of low-quality secondary wood products. TwMU aspires to maximize this renewable resource and divert this waste material, instead upcycling it into a viable building product, with the added benefit of locking additional atmospheric carbon within the fibers of the material rather than allowing its re-release into the environment.

Process

IKD acted a Architect, Artist, and Fabricator which allowed for a seamless process between concept to conception.