National Swimming Center
National Swimming Center, Beijing, Under construction, completion
scheduled for 2008

The striking exterior of the National Swimming Center,
being constructed for the 2008 Olympic Games and nicknamed, the "Water Cube," is
made from panels of a lightweight form of Teflon that transforms the building
into an energy-efficient greenhouse-like environment. Solar energy will also be
used to heat the swimming pools, which are designed to reuse double-filtered,
backwashed pool water that's usually dumped as waste.
Excess rainwater will also be collected and stored in subterranean tanks and
used to fill the pools. The complex engineering system of curvy steel frames
that form the structure of the bubble-like skin are based on research into the
structural properties of soap bubbles by two physicists at Dublin's Trinity
College. The unique structure is designed to help the building withstand nearly
any seismic disruptions.

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