Inspiration
Hein was inspired by hippies in the 1970s who turned oil drums into highly efficient stoves. These stoves were used to burn wood found among the undergrowth of the woods so that no trees would have to be cut down.
“When I saw these stoves I thought, 'This is interesting. I can improve this.'”
He laboriously set to work, using reclaimed materials such as old Heineken barrels and metal parts found on the scrapheap to create the maze of chambers and furnaces. If you peep through a small hole in the top of the barrels, it is as if you are looking right into the core of a volcano.
How it works
“The fire, unlike in normal stoves, doesn’t burn upwards but moves from the first frontal chamber backwards to a cylindrical chimney inside the barrels where the fire gets an extra boost of oxygen from a small hole in the bottom. Then it swirls upwards until it can’t go any further so it falls down around the inner chimney before it can exit.”
“Because the fire starts spiralling through the inner chimney it burns for longer, which means that more and more heat is being generated. This is more efficient than traditional stoves. The swirling of the fire makes sure that the heat generated can’t escape through the chimney.
"I wound a pipe around the inner cylinder through which water is being pumped. The fire vortex heats the water that, in turn, heats several radiators. This way the heat is being taken from the stove and distributed through the greenhouse, rather than dispersed through the chimney."
"What escapes through the chimney is only 30 degrees and the smoke you see is simply water vapour, as all particulate matter is destroyed by the intense heat inside the stove.”
“It’s an on-going process, like going somewhere but discovering something new and fun along the way. It’s about the adventure and not so much about the destination.”
Information
Rocket Stove by Hein Kramer
To be visited during the opening hours of our restaurant.
Mediamatic Biotoop, Dijkspark 6, Amsterdam, Dijkspark 6, Amsterdam
The installation is located alongside the windows of our restaurant Mediamatic ETEN.