When visitors step inside CSK Architects’ cork and timber pavilions at the RHS Chelsea Flower Show next month, the first thing they might notice is a sweet, smoky aroma exuding from the walls. And the chatter from surrounding show goers will be softened to a low hum, according the Financial Times.
These shelters will be part of the multisensory National Autistic Society Garden, a collaboration with landscape designer Sophie Parmenter.
They will be made with blocks of expanded cork from the Portuguese company Corticeira Amorim. For CSK Architects, the pavilions are a chance to show off the perks of a material — and one that is increasingly popular with designers.
“There’s something cocooning and protective about cork, and it’s very tactile,” says co-director Dido Milne, who collaborated with Matthew Barnett Howland and Oliver Wilton on Cork House, the 2019 Manser Medal-winning home in Eton, Berkshire. Ground cork will also be used for mulch in the garden.
“We want people to think about where our building blocks come from and where they go at the end of their life,” says Milne. A rendering of CSK Architects’ project for this year’s Chelsea Garden Show made with blocks of expanded cork © Kate Slater
The material derives from the cork oak tree (Quercus Suber), indigenous to the Mediterranean Basin. The oaks are stripped of their bark every nine years in a process a bit like shearing a sheep, causing minimal disruption. Today you are most likely to encounter cork when opening a wine bottle, but it lined stone towers in Sardinia during the Nuragic civilisation (c1700-600BC) and was adopted by Modernist architects including Le Corbusier, Marcel Breuer and Frank Lloyd Wright. In the following decades, however, it was little seen except as flooring, acoustic wallcoverings and insulation.
But cork has been making a resurgence as architects push towards renewable materials. The Portugal Pavilion for Expo 2000 in Hanover, by architects Álvaro Siza and Eduardo Souto de Moura, was the first building to use expanded corkboard — made by compressing and cooking waste cork to release suberin, a natural binder — on the exterior of a building. Cork has gone on to make a comeback in private homes. Spanish architecture co-operative Gurea recently clad a prefab dwelling in Navajeda, Cantabria, in two layers of expanded cork for thermal and acoustic insulation. The Italian practice LCA Architetti has wrapped a home in Porto Ceresio in cork with a subtle geometric pattern.
In the UK, Delve Architects has used cork cladding to create “a quiet, calm and mindful space” when extending a family home in Camberwell, south London. “We first saw cork used for a temporary outdoor play installation for children,” says co-founder Alex Raher, noting its softness and ability to minimise bumps and bruises. “We were immediately excited by it, both aesthetically and materially.”
In June, Corticeira Amorim will make the case for cork with City Cortex, its research programme and exhibition in Lisbon. There, Swiss-born designer Yves Béhar is taking cues from a 16th-century fortified defence to create an agglomerated cork gateway, while New York’s Leong Leong is building a soft urban playground in the Belém area from expanded cork. In Trafaria, Gabriel Calatrava has designed a community structure with an undulating agglomerated cork composite roof and Corkeen flooring (typically used for playgrounds), which will sweep up from the ground to become sculptural furniture.