McRocket
Gold Member
- Apr 4, 2018
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'US president Donald Trump has tweeted details of the design for the proposed $5 billion wall along the Mexican border, prompting ridicule from designers.
Trump posted a graphic of the barrier on 21 December 2018, along with the words: "A design of our Steel Slat Barrier which is totally effective while at the same time beautiful!"
In response, designers pointed out that the barrier is "technically not a wall" and that if to scale, it would be over 12 metres high and the gaps between the slats would be wide enough for people to squeeze through.
The image in Trump's tweet showed a row of tall columns with gaps between them and pointed tops. A car, identified by some as a Chevrolet Tahoe, featured in the drawing to illustrate the scale.
"Not to be a curmudgeon but technically this is not a wall," responded architect Cameron Sinclair, former head of social innovation at Airbnb.
Last week the US senate refused to fund the construction of the barrier, which Trump had previously stated he would force Mexico to pay for. In response, Trump ordered the partial shutdown of the government.
Wall design picked apart on Twitter
Alex Bozikovic, architecture critic at Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail, described the design as "unfathomably stupid".
"What kind of foundations would this thing require?" he asked. "How many tons of concrete to keep each 'slat' vertical?"
PhD student Reyna Knight was one of several people who calculated the dimensions of the barrier by using the known measurements of the car.
"So if it's to scale, the slats are 190 millimetres (7.5 inches) with 316-millimetre (12.4-inch) spaces," she calculated, meaning people could slip between the gaps. "So just slide through sideways!" she wrote.
Retired police officer Mark West worked out the barrier would be 40 feet (12.2 metres) tall.
"There'd be a pretty high wind load on that thing," said architect Mark Hogan in response.'
Trump's "beautiful" Steel Slat Barrier for Mexican border lampooned by designers
Interesting.
Trump posted a graphic of the barrier on 21 December 2018, along with the words: "A design of our Steel Slat Barrier which is totally effective while at the same time beautiful!"
In response, designers pointed out that the barrier is "technically not a wall" and that if to scale, it would be over 12 metres high and the gaps between the slats would be wide enough for people to squeeze through.
The image in Trump's tweet showed a row of tall columns with gaps between them and pointed tops. A car, identified by some as a Chevrolet Tahoe, featured in the drawing to illustrate the scale.
"Not to be a curmudgeon but technically this is not a wall," responded architect Cameron Sinclair, former head of social innovation at Airbnb.
Last week the US senate refused to fund the construction of the barrier, which Trump had previously stated he would force Mexico to pay for. In response, Trump ordered the partial shutdown of the government.
Wall design picked apart on Twitter
Alex Bozikovic, architecture critic at Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail, described the design as "unfathomably stupid".
"What kind of foundations would this thing require?" he asked. "How many tons of concrete to keep each 'slat' vertical?"
PhD student Reyna Knight was one of several people who calculated the dimensions of the barrier by using the known measurements of the car.
"So if it's to scale, the slats are 190 millimetres (7.5 inches) with 316-millimetre (12.4-inch) spaces," she calculated, meaning people could slip between the gaps. "So just slide through sideways!" she wrote.
Retired police officer Mark West worked out the barrier would be 40 feet (12.2 metres) tall.
"There'd be a pretty high wind load on that thing," said architect Mark Hogan in response.'
Trump's "beautiful" Steel Slat Barrier for Mexican border lampooned by designers
Interesting.