Sonic Marshmallows
The Sonic Marshmallow - Acoustic Sculptures for Wat Tyler Country Park in Basildon Essex, by Troika: The Sonic Marshmallow create a stunning acoustic experience: their shape focuses sound and allows people standing in front to hear each other’s whispers 60 metres over the pond that separate them. They work like reflectors to create a precise beam of sound.
The cylinders are also concave on their other sides, allowing the users to respectively spy on the people in the nearby car park, and the animal in the woodland, thanks to those 2.5m ears. Basildon being so close to the coast, we were also inspired by the early sound mirrors built between the two wars as early attempts of detecting incoming enemy planes approaching. Famous remaining examples lye off the Kent coast, near Dungeness.
‘As acoustic reflectors, the sonic marshmallows inscribe themselves in a long tradition of whispering galleries and other acoustic phenomena that were integral parts of older buildings, from St Paul’s cathedral to the U.S. Capitol.
We believe sound is being considered as problematic in modern architecture. Acoustic designers seem to be mainly working on how to eradicate sound reflections, or noise, from our built environment. Creating the Sonic Marshmallows made us realise the intensely magical nature of these acoustic experiences.
Credits
Design: Troika
Acoustic Engineering: Sandy Brown Associates
Fabrication: London Engineering






















Leave a comment