Rivaling wood
Desperate to earn a living, Liu could not afford to indulge in highfaluting ideas. He says that he cherished no grandiose plans when he first started his business. Rather, he had his eye on materials that were easy to come by. It was when he realized that bamboo could hardly compete with the value and versatility of mainstream woods that a new idea dawned on him: “I wanted to use bamboo to create craftwork and furniture that were on a par with their wooden counterparts.” These considerations prompted Liu to turn his back on the small-scale production that is characteristic of traditional artisanship.
Liu produces laminates by arranging bamboo strips in layers at right angles to each other. This method, coupled with the inherent strength of bamboo fibers, results in bamboo boards that are “lighter than sandalwood but stronger than false cypress wood—their strength is greater than that of tree woods,” Liu says with pride.
Liu’s factory has also invested in CNC cutting equipment, which helps transform its bamboo laminates into finely manufactured designer products. Bamboola is thus one of the few bamboo craft brands whose creations are deemed suitable for stocking in department stores and hotel gift shops.
This is also why Bamboola was commissioned in 2000 to produce the bamboo bookshelves designed by Kazuko Fujie for the library of the College of Social Sciences at National Taiwan University, the library itself being the work of eminent Japanese architect Toyo Ito. With 1,220,000 bamboo stems cut into 9,220,000 strips and then formed into 3,688 boards, the parabolically curved bookcases required careful calculation of their curvature and precision machining of the joints used in their construction. “We worked through 10,000 equations,” Liu recalls. The elegant shelves and the building complement each other. The high standard achieved by Bamboola for this project represented a significant leap forward for Taiwan’s bamboo crafts.
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In addition to their functional value, Bamboola’s products are born of extraordinary ingenuity. The photo above shows a portable bamboo tea box, and the photo at right shows a bamboo lamp that allows users to adjust the intensity of its light.