Prroject Brief

Carson Rich

The purpose of the Study Pod is to create a small study space in the library. This project aims to make the library a more study-intensive area when it is filled with people.

Inspiration for this project was taken from the google sleep pods. These pods are meant for sleeping, yet still offer a secluded, quiet place. The downside to the google pods is their heavyset chair bases which make them immovable. By suspending the pod from the ceiling,  a much more comfortable, swinging effect is created. The pod is also made to adequately fit one large person or two medium-sized people inside. 

The original model was made to represent a pod that is 4’x6’, but after building a few smaller-scale models, we decided it would be better to increase the height of the pod? Explain why models were structured with stretched cloth and rubber bands. 

After creating two cardboard prototypes, we decided to change multiple parts of the study pod’s overall design. While our original models adequately represented what we wanted the full-scale pods to look like, they lacked material quality. The crude models were made of stretched cloth, rubber bands, string, and cardboard cut by hand. After gluing the felt to the thick rubber bands we use as support rods, the project got messy quickly, and we had a hard time measuring the proper amount of felt to wrap around the pod walls. These early models represented the pod we had in mind, but the materials were too low quality. In addition to stepping up the overall quality, we wanted to add more detail to the project as well. 

We wanted to make sure the model had functional features that we intended to add to the final product. This included an entryway that could also serve as a dimmer or window to control light.   The next step was to laser cut a 4’x6.5’ prototype. Two support rings, one on the bottom and a smaller one for the top, were made in a design software called Rhino. Laser cutting them allowed them to fit perfectly. After assembling the barrel-type structure, five holes were drilled through each arm of the pod. We then lined those holes with string and stretched our fabric throughout the strings. The front entryway was left open to create a door.  Our next plans to make a door that will allow the user to choose how much room is able to be seen, and how much of the pod is private. We plan on doing this using a drawstring mechanism similar to a house curtain.