• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join

MODU's "Weather (Un)Control" exhibition explores the post-Sandy indoor air environment

By Bustler Editors|

Thursday, Dec 12, 2013

"Weather (Un)control" by MODU. Photo: Brett Beyer

As America's East Coast continues to recover from Hurricane Sandy, MODU's recently completed "Weather (Un)control" exhibition of the Marfa Dialogues/NY highlights an overlooked issue of the storm's aftermath that still remains: the invisible contaminants in indoor air.

The installation features drawings made from artificial dust and static electricity to address the current shortsighted methods for indoor air quality inspection and a "right" to better indoor air.

Weather (Un)Control with Storefront for Art and Architecture for Marfa Dialogues/NY from MODU on Vimeo.

Project description:

"The installation included an indoor weather system generated by two forms of air contamination: dust and static electricity. The project was a timely exploration of the invisible contaminants that fill indoor air long after the weather clears. This invisibly contaminated air, which goes unmeasured by the insurance companies charged with inspecting affected sites, recasts the term 'air rights' as an interior issue."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"Ten percent of New York City buildings sustained storm damage during  Hurricane Sandy. While billions of dollars were spent on the recovery effort, the storm’s invisible effects still linger in the air. Health risks in the indoor air of buildings—in the form of mold and dust—are beyond the reach of health officials, who rely mostly on outdoor air monitors."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"Dust in Sandy- affected buildings—including asbestos, silica, and gypsum—was produced not only by storm damage but, even more substantially, by the rebuilding that has followed. It remains in the air a year later. Weather (Un)Control presented a 'dust wall' that used two robotic plotters to create ephemeral drawings made of static electricity and artificial dust."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"Since there are no government agencies monitoring indoor air quality, oversight has been left to the insurance companies that determine access to indoor 'air rights.' Rather than conduct air quality tests, the insurance industry relies on visual inspections to measure air contamination as well as determine insurance risk. Weather (Un)Control highlighted the inefficiency of these visual inspections with 'dust wall' drawings that remained invisible unless lit with ultraviolet light."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"The drawings were based on the level of contaminant--asbestos, silica, or gypsum--in the captured air samples, exhibited in glass bell jars. The bell jars contained air from the Environmental Protection Agency’s post-Sandy monitor locations; either 'clean' outdoor air or 'dirty' indoor air from buildings."

Photo: Brett Beyer
Photo: Brett Beyer

"Instead of drawing with ink, the robotic plotter on one side of the wall discharged invisible positive ions to attract the falling dust; the other plotter used negative ions to clean the wall. The negative ions in the 'clean room' passed through the wall, causing more dust to gather in the 'dirty room.'"

Photo: MODU

"Weather (Un)Control revealed the cyclical and invisible nature of air contamination after extreme weather events, unseen and overlooked by   insurance companies that stake claim to our indoor 'air rights.'"

Photo: Brett Beyer

The research and images from the exhibition are now on display at the Bi-City Bienniale of Urbanism/Architecture in Shenzhen, China.

Engineering for the project was developed by Amanda Parkes/Skinteractive Studio.

All images courtesy of MODU.

Similar MODU projects we've featured on Bustler include the "Outdoor Room" in Beijing and their Art Basel "Exhale" pavilion.

Related

usa ● post-hurricane sandy ● new york ● modu ● marfa dialogues ● living environment ● invisible ● indoor ● hurricane sandy ● environmental issues ● contaminants ● air quality

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

MODU's "Weather (Un)Control" exhibition explores the post-Sandy indoor air environment

Over $500,000 awarded to architectural discourse projects by Graham Foundation

Best in urban planning recognized at AIA Regional & Urban Design Award 2026

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Re:Form - New Life for Old Spaces / Edition #3 advance registration deadline is approaching!

New architecture and design competitions: IDEAS Awards, UIA-HYP CUP International Student Competition, Vancouver Tall Challenge, and Memorial to the Sixth Extinction

Best small projects chosen at AIA Small Project Award 2026

10 standout sustainable projects honored at AIA COTE Top Ten Award 2026

Best residential architecture of 2026 honored at AIA Housing Award

Best new interiors of 2026 chosen at AIA Interior Architecture Awards

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

Best global architecture honored at RIBA International Awards 2026

World’s most beautiful airports of 2026 chosen by Prix Versailles

New architecture and design competitions: Brick in Architecture Awards, Study Architecture Student Showcase, N.Y.C. Groceries, and New York High Falls Riverfront Market

SmithGroup’s ‘pioneering’ Philip Merrill Environmental Center wins AIA Twenty-five Year Award

Sponsored Post by Buildner

Museum of Emotions / Edition #8 FINAL registration deadline is in 5 DAYS!

Here are the winners of the 2026 AIA Architecture Awards

40 emerging architects and designers under 40 from Europe honored

Next page » Loading

MODU's "Weather (Un)Control" exhibition explores the post-Sandy indoor air environment

By Bustler Editors|

Thursday, Dec 12, 2013

Share

"Weather (Un)control" by MODU. Photo: Brett Beyer

Related

usa ● post-hurricane sandy ● new york ● modu ● marfa dialogues ● living environment ● invisible ● indoor ● hurricane sandy ● environmental issues ● contaminants ● air quality

As America's East Coast continues to recover from Hurricane Sandy, MODU's recently completed "Weather (Un)control" exhibition of the Marfa Dialogues/NY highlights an overlooked issue of the storm's aftermath that still remains: the invisible contaminants in indoor air.

The installation features drawings made from artificial dust and static electricity to address the current shortsighted methods for indoor air quality inspection and a "right" to better indoor air.

Weather (Un)Control with Storefront for Art and Architecture for Marfa Dialogues/NY from MODU on Vimeo.

Project description:

"The installation included an indoor weather system generated by two forms of air contamination: dust and static electricity. The project was a timely exploration of the invisible contaminants that fill indoor air long after the weather clears. This invisibly contaminated air, which goes unmeasured by the insurance companies charged with inspecting affected sites, recasts the term 'air rights' as an interior issue."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"Ten percent of New York City buildings sustained storm damage during  Hurricane Sandy. While billions of dollars were spent on the recovery effort, the storm’s invisible effects still linger in the air. Health risks in the indoor air of buildings—in the form of mold and dust—are beyond the reach of health officials, who rely mostly on outdoor air monitors."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"Dust in Sandy- affected buildings—including asbestos, silica, and gypsum—was produced not only by storm damage but, even more substantially, by the rebuilding that has followed. It remains in the air a year later. Weather (Un)Control presented a 'dust wall' that used two robotic plotters to create ephemeral drawings made of static electricity and artificial dust."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"Since there are no government agencies monitoring indoor air quality, oversight has been left to the insurance companies that determine access to indoor 'air rights.' Rather than conduct air quality tests, the insurance industry relies on visual inspections to measure air contamination as well as determine insurance risk. Weather (Un)Control highlighted the inefficiency of these visual inspections with 'dust wall' drawings that remained invisible unless lit with ultraviolet light."

Photo: Brett Beyer

"The drawings were based on the level of contaminant--asbestos, silica, or gypsum--in the captured air samples, exhibited in glass bell jars. The bell jars contained air from the Environmental Protection Agency’s post-Sandy monitor locations; either 'clean' outdoor air or 'dirty' indoor air from buildings."

Photo: Brett Beyer
Photo: Brett Beyer

"Instead of drawing with ink, the robotic plotter on one side of the wall discharged invisible positive ions to attract the falling dust; the other plotter used negative ions to clean the wall. The negative ions in the 'clean room' passed through the wall, causing more dust to gather in the 'dirty room.'"

Photo: MODU

"Weather (Un)Control revealed the cyclical and invisible nature of air contamination after extreme weather events, unseen and overlooked by   insurance companies that stake claim to our indoor 'air rights.'"

Photo: Brett Beyer

The research and images from the exhibition are now on display at the Bi-City Bienniale of Urbanism/Architecture in Shenzhen, China.

Engineering for the project was developed by Amanda Parkes/Skinteractive Studio.

All images courtesy of MODU.

Similar MODU projects we've featured on Bustler include the "Outdoor Room" in Beijing and their Art Basel "Exhale" pavilion.

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Archinect JobsArchinect Jobs

The Archinect Job Board attracts the world's top architectural design talents.

VIEW ALL JOBS POST A JOB

Project Manager/architect

MKNH Architects

Project Manager/architect

New York, NY, US

Interior Design Project Manager

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Interior Design Project Manager

Bellevue, WA, US

Project Architect - Residential

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Project Architect - Residential

Pleasanton, CA, US

Junior Designer/Architect

O'Neill Rose Architects

Junior Designer/Architect

Brooklyn, NY, US

Job Captain

Studio AR&D Architects

Job Captain

Los Angeles, CA, US

Design Technologist / BIM Lead

The American Housing Corporation

Design Technologist / BIM Lead

Austin, TX, US

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

DAHLIN Architecture | Planning | Interiors

Architectural Project Manager - Residential

Pleasanton, CA, US

Digital Futures Fellow

The University of Tennessee - Knoxville

Digital Futures Fellow

Knoxville, TN, US

Lead Design Architect

The American Housing Corporation

Lead Design Architect

Austin, TX, US

Architectural Designer II

mdg | m-design group

Architectural Designer II

New York, NY, US

Next page » Loading