• Smithsonian
    Institution
  • Smithsonian
    Journeys
  • Smithsonian
    Store
  • Smithsonian
    Channel
  • goSmithsonian
    Visitors Guide
  • Smithsonian
    magazine

AirSpaceMag.com

  • Subscribe
  • Home
  • History of Flight
  • Flight Today
  • Military Aviation
  • Space Exploration
  • Need to Know
  • How Things Work
  • Photos
  • Videos
  • Blogs
  • History of Flight

Home Sweet Duralumin

A Buckminster Fuller design was grounded in aerospace technology.

| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email | More
  • By Nick D’Alto
  • Air & Space magazine, November 2012
 
Dymaxion The only Dymaxion to ever house a family is now a display at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan.

Henry Ford Museum

Designed to keep aircraft assembly lines running after World War II, plus solve the nation’s peacetime housing needs, the all-metal, circular Dymaxion House, designed by inventor Buckminster Fuller, was put together like an airliner. Replacing wood and shingles, a duralumin skin was stretched over metal ribs that were buttressed by stainless steel cables suspended from a central mast. The wraparound windows were plexiglass.

“[Fuller] was inspired by an airplane’s lightness, the efficiency of its parts, and how they rolled off assembly lines,” says Marc Greuther, chief curator at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan, where a prototype Dymaxion, built in 1946, is on display. To Fuller, houses “flew” through the prevailing breeze. He tested models of his 1,100-square-foot dwelling in a wind tunnel and crowned them with a pivoting roof vent, complete with tailfin. The structure could be built with existing aircraft tooling, meaning Kansas-based Beech Aircraft, Fuller’s partner in the project, might assemble houses and airplanes side-by-side.

Clever headlines (“Wichita New Kitty Hawk of Housing!”) and wry coverage in Fortune earned the house pop status. Production maps projected entire towns of the mass-produced units springing up nationwide. Promotional literature envisioned inhabitants relaxing in the Dymaxion’s semicircular rooms, selecting clothing from its revolving metal closets, taking “low-flow” showers, and otherwise living in a kind of proto-space capsule.

Yet it proved a flight of fancy. A Dymaxion House was simply too different to build, live in, or make compliant with city codes—especially since Fuller refused to modify the design. Eventually, disagreements within Fuller Houses, the company formed to produce and market the Dymaxion, brought it down. And there was the “coming home” factor: Like aircraft manufacturers who mistakenly predicted that former Air Force fliers would want their own airplanes, Fuller Houses figured military families would be first in line to buy such futuristic dwellings. “Returning servicemen, maybe after dropping bombs from aluminum planes, wanted a home that was cozy and traditional,” Greuther says. “This just wasn’t it.”

Despite accepting tailfins on their cars, families chose Levittown boxes, not Dymaxion domes. Simpler versions of Fuller’s ingenious shelters housed radar installations and served other functions (two Dymaxion Deployment Units, made of corrugated steel, still sit atop an Army Signal Corps building at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, where they housed telecommunications experiments).

The lone surviving Dymaxion House is now at the Ford Museum. Perched on a lot near Wichita, the structure, blended with a traditional house, was home to the William Graham family from 1948 until the early 1970s. By 1991, when the museum acquired it, the Dymaxion was derelict.

Senior conservator Clara Deck recalls how the oxidizing skin and decaying ribs presented many of the same conservation issues encountered in metal aircraft long exposed to the elements. “We found laminar corrosions, galvanic effects where differing materials contacted each other, and a unique, blue-tinged corrosion, which metallurgists at the Ford Motor Company are studying.” While conservators normally bristle at altering an artifact, Deck’s team adapted heat treatment, used in aircraft manufacture and repair to alter and improve the mechanical properties of an alloy, to help stabilize the structure’s metals. Workers then spent two years reassembling it in full view of museum visitors.

Greuther finds hints of Fuller’s house in today’s homes. “Light, strong, mass-produced home furnishings, from Eames chairs to Ikea, all derive from ideas Fuller developed in the Dymaxion for making efficient living spaces,” he says. “The floor is aluminum,” Deck adds, “but set over a subfloor of plywood. That’s probably the first use of this aircraft staple in home construction.”

Mechanical engineer Nick D’Alto lives in a boring rectangular house but, like Buckminster Fuller, is inspired by airplanes.

Designed to keep aircraft assembly lines running after World War II, plus solve the nation’s peacetime housing needs, the all-metal, circular Dymaxion House, designed by inventor Buckminster Fuller, was put together like an airliner. Replacing wood and shingles, a duralumin skin was stretched over metal ribs that were buttressed by stainless steel cables suspended from a central mast. The wraparound windows were plexiglass.

“[Fuller] was inspired by an airplane’s lightness, the efficiency of its parts, and how they rolled off assembly lines,” says Marc Greuther, chief curator at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Michigan, where a prototype Dymaxion, built in 1946, is on display. To Fuller, houses “flew” through the prevailing breeze. He tested models of his 1,100-square-foot dwelling in a wind tunnel and crowned them with a pivoting roof vent, complete with tailfin. The structure could be built with existing aircraft tooling, meaning Kansas-based Beech Aircraft, Fuller’s partner in the project, might assemble houses and airplanes side-by-side.

Clever headlines (“Wichita New Kitty Hawk of Housing!”) and wry coverage in Fortune earned the house pop status. Production maps projected entire towns of the mass-produced units springing up nationwide. Promotional literature envisioned inhabitants relaxing in the Dymaxion’s semicircular rooms, selecting clothing from its revolving metal closets, taking “low-flow” showers, and otherwise living in a kind of proto-space capsule.

Yet it proved a flight of fancy. A Dymaxion House was simply too different to build, live in, or make compliant with city codes—especially since Fuller refused to modify the design. Eventually, disagreements within Fuller Houses, the company formed to produce and market the Dymaxion, brought it down. And there was the “coming home” factor: Like aircraft manufacturers who mistakenly predicted that former Air Force fliers would want their own airplanes, Fuller Houses figured military families would be first in line to buy such futuristic dwellings. “Returning servicemen, maybe after dropping bombs from aluminum planes, wanted a home that was cozy and traditional,” Greuther says. “This just wasn’t it.”

Despite accepting tailfins on their cars, families chose Levittown boxes, not Dymaxion domes. Simpler versions of Fuller’s ingenious shelters housed radar installations and served other functions (two Dymaxion Deployment Units, made of corrugated steel, still sit atop an Army Signal Corps building at Fort Monmouth, New Jersey, where they housed telecommunications experiments).

The lone surviving Dymaxion House is now at the Ford Museum. Perched on a lot near Wichita, the structure, blended with a traditional house, was home to the William Graham family from 1948 until the early 1970s. By 1991, when the museum acquired it, the Dymaxion was derelict.

Senior conservator Clara Deck recalls how the oxidizing skin and decaying ribs presented many of the same conservation issues encountered in metal aircraft long exposed to the elements. “We found laminar corrosions, galvanic effects where differing materials contacted each other, and a unique, blue-tinged corrosion, which metallurgists at the Ford Motor Company are studying.” While conservators normally bristle at altering an artifact, Deck’s team adapted heat treatment, used in aircraft manufacture and repair to alter and improve the mechanical properties of an alloy, to help stabilize the structure’s metals. Workers then spent two years reassembling it in full view of museum visitors.

Greuther finds hints of Fuller’s house in today’s homes. “Light, strong, mass-produced home furnishings, from Eames chairs to Ikea, all derive from ideas Fuller developed in the Dymaxion for making efficient living spaces,” he says. “The floor is aluminum,” Deck adds, “but set over a subfloor of plywood. That’s probably the first use of this aircraft staple in home construction.”

Mechanical engineer Nick D’Alto lives in a boring rectangular house but, like Buckminster Fuller, is inspired by airplanes.


| | | Reddit | Digg | Stumble | Email | More
 
Comments

Post a Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment:

Comments are moderated, and will not appear until Smithsonian.com has approved them. Smithsonian reserves the right not to post any comments that are unlawful, threatening, offensive, defamatory, invasive of a person's privacy, inappropriate, confidential or proprietary, political messages, product endorsements, or other content that might otherwise violate any laws or policies.



Advertisement


Advertisement


Follow Us

Air & Space Magazine
@airspacemag
Follow Air & Space Magazine on Twitter

Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian.com, including daily newsletters and special offers.

Popular Videos

  • Newest
  • Most Viewed

X-47B Carrier Launch

(01:25)

SpaceShipTwo Fires Up

(02:58)

How to Bag an Asteroid

(03:52)

The Mach-2 Bomber That Never Was

(01:21)

View All Newest Videos »

The Mach-2 Bomber That Never Was

(01:21)

SpaceShipTwo Fires Up

(02:58)

How to Bag an Asteroid

(03:52)

X-47B Carrier Launch

(01:25)

View All Videos »

In the Magazine

May 2013

  • Beyond the Moon
  • The Man Who Invented the Predator
  • Cancelled: Britain’s High-Mach Heartbreak
  • Earth’s Mirror
  • The Galileo Project

View Table of Contents »

Snapshot

Refueling Angel Thunder

An airman pulls a fuel line in the desert as part of a massive interagency exercise.

Reader Scrapbook

Discovery's Tail-Cone Fitting

Check out our scrapbook of readers' aviation and space pictures. Then add your own.


Smithsonian Store

In the Cockpit and In the Cockpit II

Current and retired curators from our National Air and Space Museum contribute the insightful text and striking images... $48.99

Smithsonian Journeys

Smithsonian at Chautauqua: The Elegant Universe

Join us in western New York and explore the mysteries of the cosmos with experts (Jun 22 - 29, 2013)




View full archiveRecent Issues


  • May 2013


  • Mar 2013


  • Jan 2013

Newsletter

Sign up for regular email updates from Air & Space magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

Subscribe Now

About Us

Air & Space/Smithsonian magazine has been delighting aerospace enthusiasts with the best writing about their favorite subject since April 1986. As an adjunct of the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum, Air & Space matches the grand scope of the Museum, encompassing every era of aviation and space exploration. With stories that range from the Wright Brothers to the design of NASA's next lunar lander, Air & Space emphasizes the human stories as well as the technology of aviation and spaceflight.

Explore our Brands

  • goSmithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
  • Smithsonian Student Travel
  • Smithsonian Catalogue
  • Smithsonian Journeys
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • About Air & Space
  • Contact Us
  • Advertising
  • Subscribe
  • RSS
  • Topics
  • Member Services
  • Copyright
  • Site Map
  • Privacy Policy
  • Ad Choices

Smithsonian Institution