Innovation! Aron Losonczi is a Hungarian architect who's career is full of possibilities for the future!
"Glass fibres do not have a significant negative effect on the high compressive strength of concrete."
New RSS: Add your blog
Budapest Business Journal, Who's News: Thursday, February 5th, 2009
"Innovator" ron Losonczi has built his company, Litracon, from scratch based on his invention. The idea of creating light-transmitting concrete came in 2001 during his postgraduate years in Sweden. Since then, Litracon has been invited to various exhibitions all around the world and thousands of international articles have been published about it. It also won various design awards: red dot: best of the best (Germany), LEAD Award (UK), iF Material Award (Germany). No other Hungarian product has ever been granted these awards and prestigious titles before.
Fetching RSS feed... please stand byLight Transmitting Concrete
Blog Posts from Google
- 2009 in pictures: Green building innovations
- Invented by Hungarian architect Áron Losonczi in 2001, Litracon? is a building material that combines optical fibres with fine concrete to produce ...
- Ők 24-en, akik 2009 híreinek főszereplői voltak (3. rész)
- Losonczi Áron az évezred elején kikísérletezett üvegbetonja 2004-ben már él?ben bemutatkozott, akkor a bécsi belvárosi Schadekgassén nyíló szórakozóhely ...
- Tavasztól gyártják az üvegbetont
- A munkásgy?lésen Losonczi Áron, a Litracon Bt. ügyvezet? igazgatója arról szólt, hogy bár már 2001-ben feltalálta az üvegbetont, csak nemrégiben akadt ...
Litracon - Light Transmitting Concrete, Hungary
Concrete is a building material made of a mixture of water, sand, pebbles and cement, often defined as artificial stone. A word considered to be of French origin, concrete is associated with engineering achievements - bridges, power plants, foundries

TRANSLUCENT STONE
As this content has become more complex throughout history, the significance of making concrete transparent or translucent has increased.
Translucent stone is not only a transparent, compact building material, but also a tool of expression in the hands of artists and architects. Philosophical, visual and material signifiers are all incorporated.
Litracon presents the concept of light transmitting concrete in the form of a widely applicable new building material. It can be used for interior or exterior walls, illuminated pavements or even in art or design objects.
OPTICAL FIBRES
Light transmitting concrete is a mixture of optical glass fibres and fine concrete. It can be used as prefabricated blocks or panels. Thousands of optical glass fibres form a matrix and run parallel to each other between the two main surfaces of every block.
The proportion of the fibres is small, at 4% of the total volume. Because of their size, they become a structural component in the concrete. The surface of the blocks therefore remains similar to homogeneous concrete.
The glass fibres lead light through the two sides of the concrete. Because of their parallel position the lighting on the brighter side of such a wall appears unchanged on the darker side. Shadows are displayed on the opposing side of the wall and the colour of the light remains the same.
STRUCTURAL EFFECTS
In theory, a wall structure built out of Litracon can be a couple of metres thick. The fibres work with minimal loss of light up to 20m.
Load-bearing structures can also be built using these blocks, as glass fibres do not have a significant negative effect on the high compressive strength of concrete. The blocks can be produced in various sizes and also include embedded heat-isolation.
Light Transmitting Concrete
Litracon
" is a mixture of optical glass fibres and fine concrete."
Wikipedia
LiTraCon ("light transmitting concrete") is a translucent concrete building material. Made of fine concrete embedded with 4% by weight of optical glass fibers,Kellogg, Craig, "Space-Age Concrete Blocks That Let You See the Light." New York Times. (Late Edition (East Coast)). New York, N.Y.: Apr 15, 2004. pg. F.3.Gomez, Kevin, "LiTraCon shows concrete in new light." Construction Contractor (Australia), Aug. 2005. it was developed in 2001 by Hungarian architect Áron Losonczi working with scientists at the Technical University of Budapest.
LiTraCon is manufactured by the inventor's company, LiTraCon Bt, which was founded in spring 2004. The head office and workshop is located 160 km from the Hungarian capital city of Budapest near the town of Csongrád. all LiTraCon products have been produced by LiTraCon Bt. The concrete comes in precast blocks of different sizes.
The most notable installation of it to date is "Europe Gate," a 4 m high sculpture made of LiTraCon blocks, erected in 2004 in observance of the entry of Hungary into the European Union. The product won the German "Red Dot 2005 Design Award" for 'highest design qualities'.Anonymous. "Translucent concrete developed in Europe." Civil Engineering : Magazine of the South African Institution of Civil Engineering. Yeoville: Oct 2005. Vol. 13, Iss. 10; p. 27. Source type: Periodical. ISSN: 10212000. ProQuest document ID: 958844411. Text Word Count 340. Document URL: [http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=958844411&sid=1&Fmt=4&clientId=76566&RQT=309&VName=PQD] (Proquest: subscription required). retrieved Dec. 22, 2006
Though expensive, Litracon appeals to architects because it is stronger than glass and translucent unlike concrete. It has been considered as possible sheathing for New York's Freedom Tower.







