When Joseph Plateau published his treatise on soap bubbles and
film in 1873, soap bubbles already had their own place in
literature and art. Plateau's problem consists in taking a
generic curve in three-space and finding a surface with the least
possible area bounded by that curve. The empirical solution may
be obtained by dipping a tridimensional model of the curve into
soapy water, resulting in a form called a minimal surface. When
a soap bubble is blown, the soapy surface stretches; when blowing
ceases, the film tends toward equilibrium. The sphere presents
the least exterior surface area of all surfaces containing the
same volume of air.
The isoperimetric property refers to the fact that the
circumference encloses the largest surface area. It is
reasonable to suppose that people of ancient times in charge of
founding a town were aware of the isoperimetric property, at
least empirically: A town wall of the least possible length
containing the largest area had to be circular. The circular
plan is more prevalent in some periods of history than in others.
C.N. Ledoux presented a circular plan for a town, the form as
"pure as the one the Sun describes in its movement."
Like the circle, the sphere also appears in architecture. Ledoux
planned a spherical house. His contemporary, Boullée, used the
sphere in the cenotaph of Newton. The hemispherical igloos of
the Eskimos solve the problem of a structure based on a plane
with the greatest possible volume for the same external surface.
H.A. Schwarz solved Plateau's problem for a non-plane boundary
by developing the periodic minimal surface. Infinite periodic
minimal surfaces, combinations of saddle polygons or surfaces, are more stable. Such a surface has been adapted as a play
sculpture in the Brooklyn Museum, where children can actually
enter into the labyrinthic structure of periodic minimal
surfaces.
"I hope that none of you are yet tired of playing with bubbles,
because, as I hope we shall see, there is more in a common bubble
than those who have only played with them generally imagine."
Charles V. Boys
Frei Otto used soap film models to design his tensile-structures.
He developed a technique to obtain a precise photogrammetric
evaluation of soap film models and another method to simulate
peaks in a membrane of soap films. Otto's Institute of
Architecture, Stuttgart, was built along the lines of such a
model.

