Adaptive recycled plastic architecture: Vacuum-Sealed Chainmail Structures Through Computational Design
Yi Xu, Farzin Lotfi-Jam, Mustafa Faruki

TL;DR
This paper presents a novel computational design methodology for creating vacuum-sealed chainmail structures from recycled plastics, enabling sustainable, adaptable, and high-performance architectural applications in extreme environments.
Contribution
It introduces a new integrated approach for designing, testing, and fabricating recycled plastic chainmail structures optimized for structural performance and adaptability.
Findings
Rectangular chainmail configuration is most efficient.
Structures demonstrate high deformation capacity and load-bearing performance.
Optimization enables practical deployment with material efficiency.
Abstract
The construction industry is a major consumer of raw materials, accounting for nearly half of global material usage annually, while generating significant waste that poses sustainability challenges. This paper explores the untapped potential of recycled plastics as a primary construction material, leveraging their lightweight, flexible, and customizable properties for advanced applications in modular chainmail systems. Through a computational workflow, the study optimizes the design, testing, and fabrication of vacuum-sealed chainmail structures composed of recycled plastic filaments, demonstrating their adaptability and structural performance for architectural use. Key contributions include a novel methodology for integrating recycled plastic filaments into chainmail geometries, validated through 2D sectional testing, 3D shell structure generation, and physical modeling under vacuum…
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