The Cabane

Description

The “Cabane”, a French term for a small seasonal shelter or hut, is a large light grey textile cloth. Designed by Brussels-based textile studio Chevalier Masson, the “Cabane” consists of a 82 square meters assemblage of fire-resistant polyester fabric. It features four primary suspension points with additional colour-coded rope loops to allow for versatile spatial configurations.

Another version of the Cabane was used in the studio of 51N4E in Brussels and was presented as part of the exhibition “The Things Around Us” at the Canadian Centre for Architecture (CCA). A 1:10 scale model remains in the Lab serving as tool to explore potential uses and variations.

The “Cabane” at the Design in Dialogue Lab in Zürich (photograph: Max Creasy)

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How to Use

With its overall 16 suspension points, the “Cabane” offers a mulitplicity of possibilities for room configurations with ever-changing functions. It can transform into a projection screen, a workshop space or dance studio. As a “room within a room”, it creates a cozy and inviting environment for gathering, exchange, presentations, and discussions.

During our ‘virtual field trip’ in and around Tirana, it became the backdrop for a variety of immersive experiences. Animated screenshots from Google Street View were projected on three of its sides, giving participants seated inside the impression of riding in a taxi through the streets of Tirana, with the city unfolding before their eyes.

A room in a room – creating an inviting environment (photograph: NEWROPE)

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Credits

[Date] Spring 2019

[Place] Based at the Design in Dialogue Lab in (ETH, ONA), traveling to other places

[Design] Chevalier Masson

[Material] Polyester

[Size] 82 square meters

[Contributors] Kvadrat, 51N4E