Pálmadóttir at present lives in Reykjavik, the place she runs her personal structure studio, S.ap arkitektarand the Icelandic department of the Danish structure firm Lendager, which makes a speciality of reusing constructing supplies.
The architect believes the lava that flows from a single eruption may yield sufficient constructing materials to put the foundations of a complete metropolis. She has been researching this chance for greater than 5 years as a part of a undertaking she calls Lavaforming. Collectively along with her son and colleague Arnar Skarphéðinsson, she has recognized three potential strategies: drill straight into magma pockets and extract the lava; channel molten lava into pre-dug trenches that would type a metropolis’s foundations; or 3D-print bricks from molten lava in a way much like the way in which objects might be printed out of molten glass.
Pálmadóttir and Skarphéðinsson first introduced the idea throughout a chat at Reykjavik’s DesignMarch pageant in 2022. This 12 months they’re producing a speculative movie set in 2150, in an imaginary metropolis referred to as Eldborg. Their movie, titled Lavaforming, follows the lives of Eldborg’s residents and appears again on how they realized to make use of molten lava as a constructing materials. It will likely be introduced on the Venice Biennale, a number one structure pageant, in Could.
Set in 2150, her speculative movie Lavaforming presents a fictional metropolis constructed from molten lava.
COURTESY OF S.AP ARKITEKTAR
Buildings and building supplies like concrete and metal at the moment contribute a staggering 37% of the world’s annual carbon dioxide emissions. Many architects are advocating for the usage of pure or preexisting supplies, however mixing earth and water right into a mildew is one factor; tinkering with 2,000 °F lava is one other.
Nonetheless, Pálmadóttir is piggybacking on analysis already being accomplished in Iceland, which has 30 lively volcanoes. Since 2021, eruptions have intensified within the Reykjanes Peninsula, which is near the capital and to vacationer scorching spots just like the Blue Lagoon. In 2024 alone, there have been six volcanic eruptions in that space. This frequency has given volcanologists alternatives to review how lava behaves after a volcano erupts. “We attempt to observe this beast,” says Gro Birkefeldt M. Pedersen, a volcanologist on the Icelandic Meteorological Workplace (IMO), who has consulted with Pálmadóttir on a number of events. “There may be a lot occurring, and we’re simply attempting to catch up and be ready.”
Pálmadóttir’s idea assumes that a few years from now, volcanologists will have the ability to forecast lava stream precisely sufficient for cities to plan on utilizing it in constructing. They’ll know when and the place to dig trenches in order that when a volcano erupts, the lava will stream into them and solidify into both partitions or foundations.
At present, forecasting lava flows is a posh science that requires distant sensing expertise and super quantities of computational energy to run simulations on supercomputers. The IMO sometimes runs two simulations for each new eruption—one primarily based on information from earlier eruptions, and one other primarily based on further information acquired shortly after the eruption (from varied sources like specifically outfitted planes). With each occasion, the staff accumulates extra information, which makes the simulations of lava stream extra correct. Pedersen says there may be a lot analysis but to be accomplished, however she expects “a number of development” within the subsequent 10 years or so.
To design the speculative metropolis of Eldborg for his or her movie, Pálmadóttir and Skarphéðinsson used 3D-modeling software program much like what Pedersen makes use of for her simulations. The town is primarily constructed on a community of trenches that have been crammed with lava over the course of a number of eruptions, whereas buildings are constructed out of lava bricks. “We’re going to let nature design the buildings that may pop up,” says Pálmadóttir.