14-year-old Miles Wu folded origami pattern that holds 10k times its own weight

9 comments

Don't get hung up on "14 year old". Pay attention to "took up origami 6 years ago". That's 6 years of passionate learning, experimenting and improvement.

Also, ‘years’ tend to be a lot more hours for kids, and each hour yields more learning due to neuroplasticity.

Also don't get hung up on "folded". He hasn't innovated a design (it was invented by a Japanese astrophysicist, Miura-Ori), merely measured sustainable load across different designs.

"Miura" is the name of the astrophysicist. "Ori" (折り) just means "fold", and in "origami" = "fold+paper".

So what is the ideal pattern and how can you build a shelter with it?

I think it would be fun to build a playhouse out of it.

Fun when these things hold a surprising amount of weight. Reminds me when these two engineers on Lego Masters made a bridge:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G9WT6TB15yE

wtf, why lego, whhhy? "The uploader has not made this video available in your country"

edit: What, they geoblocked a ~1min clip, wow.

I live in the U.S.: I can watch it.

What is "your country?"

Triangles together strong!

Could concept be applied to submarine vehicles to exponential increase their resistance to pressure at depth?

This is weight distribution on a flat plain. Think of Roman Arches. On a curved plain, weight distribution of THIS origami falls apart as pressure is added horizontally (not just vertically).

Where can we read about the other submissions?

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