Skip to content
Tech News

What Happens When F1 Car Designers Build Architectural Models

By

Reading time 1 minute

Comments (0)

Gizmodo EIC Geoff Manaugh and U.K. architects Smout Allen tapped an unlikely source to help create their new exhibition in London: Williams F1. But, in this case, the engineers at Williams weren’t building the advanced race cars they’re well-known for—they were 3D-printing the parts for an intricate model of an experimental energy storage park.

http://bldgblog.gizmodo.com/the-british-exploratory-land-archive-1465483958

So, what are we looking at here? It’s a concept model of the Flywheel Reservoir, a proposed reserve-energy park for the coast of Kent, where excess energy from the world’s largest wind farm—the London Array—could be stored in a subterranean park of hybrid-power flywheels (a technology Williams is well-known for).

On Williams’ operational model, those flywheels are the repetitive bits—printed in their high-tech fab lab.

Other incredible models abound, too. One shows the Nottingham caves, 3D-printed in relief. How did the team generate a realistic model? With a huge set of laser-scanning data from the Nottingham Caves Survey and some extra help from the U.K.-based ScanLAB Projects, of course.

Check out images from the show below—it’s easy to see the future of fabrication and model-building in each project, which makes it well worth a peek.

https://dailygrid.kinja.com/electrical-flywheels-race-car-technology-and-3d-print-1467174950

Explore more on these topics

Share this story

Sign up for our newsletters

Subscribe and interact with our community, get up to date with our customised Newsletters and much more.