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Shape Change in Responsive Architectural Structures: Current Reasons & Challenge (2006)

article⁄Shape Change in Responsive Architectural Structures: Current Reasons & Challenge (2006)
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abstract⁄Shape control within architectural structures is a natural extension to the practice of engineering and architectural design. The knowledge needed for it’s development builds upon two well understood foundations 1 the long existing knowledge that building performance and function are intimately connected to the shape of built spaces and 2 the relatively new idea that embedded computational systems may be employed to control devices in useful and beautiful ways. When combined, each type of knowledge can be used to further architecture and engineering at both theoretical and methodological levels. Structural shape control is of major interest within architecture because it is the primary ingredient needed to produce building envelopes that change shape. Structural shape control also currently represents a major technological and methodological stumbling block for architects, posing many challenges that have theoretical and practical origins. Theoretically, responsive architectural structures demand a reevaluation of existing notions of space making. Practically, these systems demand a reevaluation of construction and design methodologies across both engineering and architectural practice.
keywords⁄2006archive-note-no-tags
Year 2006
Authors d’Estree Sterk, Tristan.
Issue Synthetic Landscapes
Pages 251-260
Library link Gregory A. Luhan, Phillip Anzalone, Mark Cabrinha & Cory Clarke, 2006. bib⁄Synthetic Landscapes. ACADIA.
Entry filename shape-change-responsive-architectural-structures