The Olympic Games opened today and I couldn't care less. I would not like to offend anyone, but I simply can't see any reason to
watch sports on TV; after working most days sitting in front a computer monitor, I prefer to engage in some real sport activities like hiking or biking in the surrounding hills or mountains.
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However, there is something interesting for me about these Games, and of course it's
The Water Cube.
I was stunned when I first saw the photos of the building - it was under construction and it was after my discovery of Voronoi diagrams.
Mixed feelings flew through my veins. On the one hand, I was happy that something so similar to Voronoi was actually being built, and on such a large scale. On the other hand, I knew that most of the people, when they'd see my work, would say "Oh, you're doing a kind of bubble-building, just something like the Beijing Water Cube. Not very innovative."
Let's put
the question of originality aside.
The Water Cube is a fascinating building, it really looks like a bunch of bubbles, but it's geometry isn't based on Voronoi diagrams. I learned that the geometry behind is
Weaire-Phelan structure.
Well,
Voronoi,
Steiner trees,
Weaire-Phelan... it all looks the same - bubbles.
It's really brave to actually build that kind of architecture. I wonder how it will age. It's certainly a peak of today's engineering, maybe even one of the wonders of the new world; pitty it surely won't last as long as
the old ones. They don't do these kind of wonders anymore :-)