To Life! Geodesic Sukkah Spherical design meets all religious requirements. Shelli Liebman Dorfman Staff Writer F or most, the word "sukkah" brings to mind a traditional, square-shaped wooden or canvas but with slats across the ceiling. But to inventor Shalom Michlin, it conjures thoughts of the trans- parent, triangular-walled, metal-topped geodesic dome he built in the back yard of his West Bloomfield home. He created the bulk of the structure by bolting together 86 clear plastic triangles. He shaped the ceiling by connecting 45 metal triangles made of electrical con- duits. "In 1973, I made the world's first geo- desic dome sukkah," Michlin said. Yet all of the subsequent constructions he built through the years have been more conventional — until now. "I've been thinking about doing another one for about three years," he said. "A cou- ple of weeks ago, I woke up at 4 a.m. and decided to do it — but to make it several notches higher than the last one." Because no such structure was commer- cially available for purchase, he set out to buy the parts and construct one from scratch. "I had a crew of three guys [from Laserland, his laser printing manufactur- ing company in Sylvan Lake] working on it with me:' he said. They started only six days before Sukkot was to begin. "I was afraid we were cutting it too close so on Saturday night after Shabbos, my daughter Esther, who's 16, came outside with me and we worked on it until after midnight." Although the sukkah is highly unusual, Michlin's rabbi says it is perfectly accept- able for use. "Usually it is thought that a sukkah must have at least three temporary walls:' said Rabbi Elimelech Silberberg of Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center in West Bloomfield. "But it is also all right to eat in a sukkah that has no walls, if it is com- pletely enclosed like this one. "Making it transparent is certainly unusual:' the rabbi saidA sukkah is sup- posed have more shade than sun — but that only applies to what comes in through the top:' he said. "The top of this sukkah is covered with enough scach [material for the top of the sukkah] to keep it kosher." Rabbi Silberberg referred to Shalom Michlin's remarkable sukkah as "a perfect project for Shalom. He is a genius who doesn't often do things the way most do. He tends to do them with a different sort of twist!' Michlin and his wife, Sarah, hosted many neighbors and friends during the holiday. They didn't even have to go inside to see the interior. "Not with the walls com- pletely clear like a fishbowl," Michlin said. Michlin, who spent about $3,000 just on materials for the sukkah, said he'd like to enclose his trampoline in a similar struc- ture. And next year, he may be commer- cially building and selling luxury geodesic dome sukkot. "I might even sell this one and build a bigger, more bizarre-looking, perfectly spherical one for my family:' he said. The one he built this year is 16 feet in diameter, but Michlin said not all of it is usable space. True to the distinctiveness of his inven- tions, he said, "We have to take into account the space used up by the spigot and the little pond with the fountain that are inside the suldcah." Right top: Arnold Michlin of Waterford (in wheelchair) admires the handiwork of his son Shalom Michlin, who built the geodesic sukkah outside his West Bloomfield home. bottom: Arnold and Shalom prepare to shake the lulav in the geodesic sukkah. JN October 27 2005 23