Journal: Interaction Design Classics #4: The Melnikov House intercom system

(See previous entry on visiting the Melnikov House in Moscow.)

Fourth in an occasional series, and this found in one of the true icons of 20th century architecture, designed and built between 1927 and 1929 by Konstantin Melnikov.

image from www.flickr.com

One of the many quirky delights of the Melnikov House in Moscow is this internal intercom system. Two holes on the ground floor corridor. The right speaks to a tube on the top floor, the left to the entry on the street, in a prototypical door-entry system. (The left isn’t working, apparently, but will do again one day.) These holes simply snake up through the walls to the studio, and down under the ground, out to the street. They are simply metal tubes, carrying the voice.

image from www.flickr.com

It’s like the old idea of two tin cans joined by string, yet replacing the string with a tin can extruded to become the entire length of the system.

At the top of the house, the other end. A large metal tube rises up out of the floor in the corner of the studio, with a ‘speaker’ on it.

image from www.flickr.com

On the mezzanine above, another hole to speak/listen into.

image from www.flickr.com

It’s as simple as could be, and its affordances are entirely clear. Speak into the hole. Listen to the hole.

It is very low power. In fact, no power. And certainly resilient, save a small rodent crawling into a pipe and staying there. It is seamful—perhaps not particularly beautiful seams, but seamful nonetheless—and thus entirely in keeping with Constructivist/Functionalist principles.

In an age of contingent smart home systems, and IoT-enabled domestic infrastructures, I admire the way these snaking tubes simply reach for humble physics, the resilience of their dependence on sound waves and hard surfaces, subtle enhancements to living baked into the building. Learning from 1927.

Elsewhere, on Interaction Design Classics:
#1: The 'progress bar' on the Voice-O-Graph in 'Badlands'
#2: The big pink arrow from 'Grand Theft Auto'
#3: The 'A Bit More' button on the Breville Professional 800 Collection 4-slice Toaster
#4: The Melnikov House intercom system

(See previous entry on visiting the Melnikov House in Moscow.) Fourth in an occasional series, and this found in one of the true icons of 20th century architecture, designed and built between 1927 and 1929 by Konstantin Melnikov. One of the many quirky delights of the Melnikov House in Moscow is this internal intercom system.…

City of Sound.
Written by Dan Hill since 2001.

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