展示HN:野兽派混凝土笔记本电脑支架(2024)
Show HN: Brutalist Concrete Laptop Stand (2024)

原始链接: https://sam-burns.com/posts/concrete-laptop-stand/

这位创作者是粗野主义建筑的爱好者,制作了一个独特而沉重的笔记本电脑支架,体现了20世纪60年代混凝土结构和城市衰败的美学。支架采用原始的混凝土饰面,通过有意的混合和打磨技术实现,露出砾石并营造出风化的外观。 除了美观之外,它还具有高度的功能性,内置了2.1安培USB充电端口和一个三孔插座。一个锡制花盆,种有垂吊的“珍珠串”植物,被嵌入混凝土中。故意暴露的生锈钢筋和逼真的腐蚀“损坏”电线等细节进一步增强了破败的主题。 制作过程包括两次混凝土浇筑和创新的老化工艺——使用盐、过氧化氢甚至氨溶液来实现逼真的锈蚀和腐蚀。尽管支架非常重,但创作者对最终结果感到满意,认为其形式与功能的结合完美地捕捉了他们想要的粗野主义愿景。

## 粗野主义混凝土笔记本电脑支架 – Hacker News 总结 一位 Hacker News 用户分享了一个自制的混凝土笔记本电脑支架,引发了热烈讨论。创作者“sam-bee”强调了纯粹为了个人乐趣而创造东西的解放感,无论外界评价如何。 尽管观点不一——有些人觉得它在美学上不吸引人或因其重量而不实用——许多人赞扬了这个项目的创造力以及“仅仅因为想做就去做”的精神。讨论扩展到关于建筑中“粗野主义”的真正定义、混凝土施工技术(包括一个令人难忘的关于使用振动设备去除气泡的提及!)以及独立制作的乐趣。 该帖子还引发了关于 Hacker News 策展流程的更广泛讨论,许多用户注意到“Show HN”帖子的质量最近有所提高。最终,这个项目引起共鸣,因为它庆祝了个人表达,并提醒人们在不寻求认可的情况下追求创造性努力。
相关文章

原文

I am a great lover of brutalist architecture. 1960’s concrete buildings may not be for everyone, but I love the aesthetic. I’ve made a laptop stand, to help me hack in true brutalist style. It has the characteristic beton brut (raw concrete) surface texture, and is quite possibly the heaviest laptop stand in the world. It also boasts 2 x 2.1 amp USB charge ports, a three-pin plug socket for my laptop, and an integral plant pot. Here are some of its highlights.

0 / 3

Concrete laptop stand in use

Concrete laptop stand in use

1 / 3

Plug socket and 2 USB charge ports

Plug socket and 2 USB charge ports

2 / 3

Integral plant pot in corner of concrete laptop stand

Integral plant pot in corner of concrete laptop stand

3 / 3

Rusted rebar and exposed wire add to the theme of urbex and decay

Rusted rebar and exposed wire add to the theme of urbex and decay


Key Features

An early drawing of the laptop stand

An early drawing of the laptop stand

The key features include:

  • Brutalist style overhang
  • Urban decay aesthetic with a damaged corner and rusted rebar
  • 3-pin plug socket
  • 2 x USB charge ports
  • Exposed rebar rusted
  • Exposed copper wire corrosion
  • Integral plant pot with string of pearls plant
  • Artificially rusted penpot

Making the Laptop Stand

It was a slow process, but here are some action shots of making the laptop stand:

The Components

Concrete

The rebar cage inside the form, awaiting the first pour

The rebar cage inside the form, awaiting the first pour

There were two main pours of concrete, to do the base and the side walls. It intentionally wasn’t mixed very thoroughly, to produce areas on the surface where there was more sand or more cement. Sanding the sides has also exposed the gravel in the concrete. This help to make it look aged and weathered.

On smaller pieces such as little plant pots or coasters, it is possible to use quick drying cement and get the bubbles out by vibrating the form with an electric toothbrush after the pour. For very large pieces such as a dining table, you need to use slow drying cement, and walk around the tabletop for ages, tapping the form with a rubber mallet to remove any air bubbles. For a medium-sized piece like this, a vibrating dildo is actually the best thing to use. Just think of it like any other power tool.

Plant Pot

Integral plant pot is a tin set into the concrete

Integral plant pot is a tin set into the concrete

The plant pot is made of a ghee tin. Four bolts were drilled through it and covered in concrete during the first pour to fix it in place. The inner pot is a grey plastic plant pot which fits perfectly in the ghee tin. I’ve chosen a string of pearls plant, because I liked the effect of a running plant hanging over the edge. It reminds me of the derelict buildings I’ve seen during urban exploration.

Exposed Wire

The exposed wire really adds a sense fo dilapidation and urban decay. This isn’t actually the live power cable, but it has been made to look like one. The real cable disappears into the concrete on the right hand side of the laptop stand, and the damaged fake cable comes out of the other side of the wall. The real power lead is strapped to the rebar cage with cable ties, but the overall effect is that it looks like the live cable is badly damaged.

The wire had to be wrapped in kitchen paper and sprayed with ammonia and water, to produce the appropriate corrosion effect. Attempts to lower it into a little pot filled with liquid didn’t really work - the copper compounds turned the liquid blue, but it wasn’t forming a patina on the wire.

Here’s what seems to be happening here:

$$ \ce{Cu2+ + 2NH3 + 3H2O -> Cu(OH)2 + 2NH4+} $$

The exposed rebar was first polished with a wire brush attachment on a Dremel tool, to remove the concrete and expose the metal, then it was rusted with water, salt, and hydrogen peroxide.

Penpot

Rusted penpot being painted with mold

Rusted penpot being painted with mold

The penpot was similarly rusted with salt water and peroxide, after being scuffed up with some sandpaper. It has also had some moss added to it: acrylic paint cut with sand was added, to produce a realistic texture. Dab, don’t wipe.

Summary

I’m delighted with my laptop stand, even if the aesthetic isn’t to everyone’s taste. The themes of brutalist architecture, urban decay, and dilapidation have worked out really nicely, especially with the deliberate hole and the rusted metal. It has pride of place on a desk it had to be carried to on a trolley because of the sheer weight of the stand, but nothing worthwhile comes easy.

Concrete laptop stand still in mold Concrete laptop stand still in mold Concrete laptop stand still in mold

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com