CumInCAD is a Cumulative Index about publications in Computer Aided Architectural Design
supported by the sibling associations ACADIA, CAADRIA, eCAADe, SIGraDi, ASCAAD and CAAD futures

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Hits 1 to 20 of 11855

_id ecaade2013_128
id ecaade2013_128
authors Symeonidou, Ioanna; Hirschberg, Urs and Kaftan, Martin
year 2013
title Designing the Negative
source Stouffs, Rudi and Sariyildiz, Sevil (eds.), Computation and Performance – Proceedings of the 31st eCAADe Conference – Volume 1, Faculty of Architecture, Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands, 18-20 September 2013, pp. 683-691
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2013.1.683
wos WOS:000340635300071
summary Designing the Negative was the title of a Master Studio that took place at the Institute of Architecture and Media of Graz University of Technology during the summer semester of 2012. Students designed and fabricated prototypes of customized concrete formwork as part of their studio assignment. The studio theme forced students to think about digital fabrication with parametric tools in a hands-on fashion. Using robotic technology and hot-wire cutting, students worked with the robot’s constraints (size of the robot’s arm, robot’s axis and tool’s restrictions) to design complex curved elements that could serve as formwork (the negative) for cast concrete elements (the positive). The students were asked to design a production strategy for their cast concrete elements as well as the application of said elements in an architectural scheme. The student projects confirmed the value of a pedagogy that takes on research-relevant questions in an interdisciplinary studio setting and engages students in a process that is best described as digital crafting: it simultaneously addressed the conceptual and technical as well as the material and tactile aspects of digital fabrication and design.
keywords Digital fabrication; customization; concrete; hot-wire cutting; parametric design.
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id ijac202220404
id ijac202220404
authors Symeonidou, Ioanna; Renate Weissenböck; Alexandros Efstathiadis
year 2022
title Augmented Bridges: Investigating the potential of augmented reality for the design of configurable bridges
source International Journal of Architectural Computing 2022, Vol. 20 - no. 4, pp. 742–757
summary The paper expands on the potential of using Augmented Reality (AR) for the design and customization of bridges. Following a literature review on the use of AR in architectural design, and in particular in design education, the authors discuss educational experiences gained in two digital design studios. These two courses were taught remotely at the University of Thessaly and the Frankfurt University of Applied Sciences and cross-informed each other. The teaching experiences of the authors were evaluated and subsequently used to develop the curriculum of “Augmented Bridges”, an experimental AR design studio. The aim of the paper is to present current research in AR and the interactive design process of site-specific bridges, using digital and augmented media. The studio results offered valuable insight into the educational and creative value of AR technologies in architecture
keywords Augmented reality, digital media, parametric design, digital design studio, design education
series journal
last changed 2024/04/17 14:30

_id ecaadesigradi2019_126
id ecaadesigradi2019_126
authors Szabo, Anna, Lloret-Fritschi, Ena, Reiter, Lex, Gramazio, Fabio, Kohler, Matthias and J. Flatt, Robert
year 2019
title Revisiting Folded Forms with Digital Fabrication
source Sousa, JP, Xavier, JP and Castro Henriques, G (eds.), Architecture in the Age of the 4th Industrial Revolution - Proceedings of the 37th eCAADe and 23rd SIGraDi Conference - Volume 2, University of Porto, Porto, Portugal, 11-13 September 2019, pp. 191-200
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2019.2.191
summary This paper discusses the potential of emerging digital fabrication techniques to produce material-efficient thin folded concrete structures. Although in the 50s and 60s folded structures provided a common optimal solution for spanning large distances without additional vertical supports, today, the number of these projects decreased significantly due to their complicated formworks and labour-intensive realization. Digital fabrication methods for concrete hold the promise to efficiently produce intricate folded mass-customized shapes with enhanced load-bearing capacity. This paper focuses on a robotic slip-forming process, Smart Dynamic Casting (SDC), to produce various thin-walled folded concrete elements with the same formwork providing smooth surface finish and gradual variations along the height. An empirical research methodology was applied to evaluate the fabrication feasibility of digitally designed thin folded geometries with one-to-one scale prototypes. Despite the discovered design limitations due to fabrication and material constraints, the exploration led to a new promising research direction, termed 'Digital Casting'.
keywords folded structures; digital concrete; Smart Dynamic Casting; set on demand; Digital Casting
series eCAADeSIGraDi
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id 9c96
authors Szalapaj, Peter and Chang, David C.
year 1999
title Computer Architectural Representation - Applying the VOIDs Framework to a Bridge Design Scheme
source Architectural Computing from Turing to 2000 [eCAADe Conference Proceedings / ISBN 0-9523687-5-7] Liverpool (UK) 15-17 September 1999, pp. 387-394
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.1999.387
summary A virtual environment presents sensory information and visual feedback to the user in order to give convincing illusion of an artificial world. In the architectural profession, the spatio-temporal metaphor in itself constitutes significant information retrieval, because we understand architecture by seeing it. This paper attempts to understand, and then to analyse the characteristics of representation of architectural models in virtual environments. We will examine the use and creativity of current computer generated architectural presentation in virtual environments. Our observations will be applied to the modelling of a bridge in Castlefield, Manchester, and evaluated by a group of students within the School of Architecture at Sheffield University. The conclusion of this paper will be the presentation of a conceptual structure for representing architectural models in virtual environments. This paper also explores the tension between the correspondence and constructivist views of representation. The correspondence view of representation relies on the idea that a representation corresponds to what is out there in the world. The constructivist view of representation advocates that any actual interpretation would depend on the context of their social and cultural backgrounds. However, the authors believe there should be a combination of these two views for architectural representation in virtual environments, and a framework developed by the authors - VOIDs will be presented.
keywords Virtual Environment, Architectural Representation, VOIDs, Correspondence, Constructivist
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id ddssar9633
id ddssar9633
authors Szalapaj, Peter and Kane, Andrew
year 1996
title Techniques of Superimposition
source Timmermans, Harry (Ed.), Third Design and Decision Support Systems in Architecture and Urban Planning - Part one: Architecture Proceedings (Spa, Belgium), August 18-21, 1996
summary This paper addresses the issues of 2-D and 3-D image manipulation in the context of a Computational Design Formulation System. The central feature of such a system is the ability to bring together two or more design objects in the same reference space for the purpose of analysis. Studies of traditional design methods has revealed the effectiveness of this technique of superimposition. This paper describes ways in which superimposition can be achieved, and, in particular, focuses on a range of domain-independent knowledge-based graphical operators that enable the decomposition of complex design forms into simpler aspects (secondary models) that can then be superimposed and/or analysed from a design-theoretic point of view. Examples of domain-independent knowledge-base graphical operators include object selection, planar bisection, 2-D closure (the grouping of lines into regions), aggregation (the decomposition of 2-D regions into aggregations of lines), spatial bisection, 3-D closure (the grouping of 2-D regions into volumes), 3-D aggregation (the decomposition of volumes into aggregations of 2-D regions). The representation of these operators is dependent upon the notion of a parameterisable volume, thus avoiding the need for translations between multiple representations of graphical objects by providing a common representation form for all objects. Secondary models can therefore subsequently be manipulated either through subtractive procedures (e.g. carving voids from solids), or by additive ones (e.g. assembling given design elements), or by other means such as transformation or distortion. The same techniques of superimposition can also be used to support the visualisation of design forms in two ways: by the juxtaposition of plans and sections with the 3-D form; by the multiple superimposition of alternative design representations e.g. structural schematic, parti schematic, volumetric schematic and architectural model.
keywords Design Formulation, Superimposition, Primary Model, Secondary Model, Parameterisable Volume
series DDSS
last changed 2003/08/07 16:36

_id 8ce2
authors Szalapaj, Peter J.
year 1993
title Contextual Hypermedia in the Design Studio
source [eCAADe Conference Proceedings] Eindhoven (The Netherlands) 11-13 November 1993
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.1993.x.i7f
summary The focus of this paper is on the development and use of hypermedia applications for the presentation of design studio projects, based upon the author's own recent experience of teaching CAD at both undergraduate and postgraduate level. The contention of this paper is that this activity cannot be reduced to routine Hypercard stack development. Instead, the development of applications in this area need to give support to the expression of the design-theoretical issues that are central to the presentation of any design studio project, by exploiting the many issues of concern that are emerging from the field of human- computer interaction (HCI) The hypermedia application i.e. in this case design-theoretical views of a design project, will inevitably influence the specification of a user-interface, and hence the presentation and appearance of the design project. This paper will investigate the extent to which the interface can be separated out from the application and the converse issue namely, whether non-contextual hypermedia environments restrict design applications.

series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:50

_id ecaade03_319_147_szalapaj
id ecaade03_319_147_szalapaj
authors Szalapaj, Peter J.
year 2003
title Architectural GIS: Interoperable and Integrated Information Environments
source Digital Design [21th eCAADe Conference Proceedings / ISBN 0-9541183-1-6] Graz (Austria) 17-20 September 2003, pp. 319-325
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2003.319
summary This paper investigates ways of bringing together the existing GIS techniques of spatial analysis with emerging object-based computer modelling and presentation methods. The end product is Architectural GIS: computer systems that can be applied to the analysis and evaluation of both rural and urban environments. The paper will focus on the various ways in which information is represented, and the spatial analysis techniques that form the basis of mainstream GIS.
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id cd68
authors Szalapaj, Peter J. and Tang, Songlan
year 1994
title Giving Colour to Contextual Hypermedia
source The Virtual Studio [Proceedings of the 12th European Conference on Education in Computer Aided Architectural Design / ISBN 0-9523687-0-6] Glasgow (Scotland) 7-10 September 1994, pp. 191-200
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.1994.191
summary Design development evolves within design contexts that require expression as much as the design itself, and these contexts often constrain any presentation in ways that are not usually explicitly thought of. The context of a design object will therefore influence the conceptual ways of thinking about and presenting this object. Support in hypermedia applications for the expression of the colour context, therefore, should be based upon sound theoretical principles to ensure the effective communication of design ideas. Johannes Itten has postulated seven ways to communicate visual information by means of colour contrast effects, each of which is unique in character, artistic value, and symbolic effect. Of these seven contrasting effects, three are in terms of the nature of colour itself: hue, brightness, and saturation. Although conventional computer graphics applications support the application of these colour properties to discrete shapes, they give no analysis of contrasting colour relationships between shapes. The proposed system attempts to overcome this deficiency. The remaining four contrast effects concern human psychology and psychophysics, and are not supported at all in computer graphics applications. These include the cold-warm contrast, simultaneous contrast, complementary contrast, and the contrast of extension. Although contrast effects are divided into the above seven aspects, they are also related to one another. Thus, when the hue contrast works, the light-dark contrast and cold-warm contrast must work at the same time. Computational support for these colour effects form the focus of this paper.
series eCAADe
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id ecaade2022_248
id ecaade2022_248
authors Szentesi-Nejur, Szende, de Luca, Francesco and Flamand, Krystel
year 2022
title Simulation Based Daylight Uniformity Optimizations for Elementary School Projects in Quebec Province
source Pak, B, Wurzer, G and Stouffs, R (eds.), Co-creating the Future: Inclusion in and through Design - Proceedings of the 40th Conference on Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (eCAADe 2022) - Volume 1, Ghent, 13-16 September 2022, pp. 639–648
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2022.1.639
summary Adequate quantity of daylight provision and its uniform distribution is a key factor in the design of educational buildings. Methods exists to assess through simulations the adequacy of daylight quantity and its uniformity in buildings during the design phase. Building regulations and public procurement procedures set the daylight requirements for school buildings. Daylight regulations were recently introduced in Quebec, Canada, which have an impact also on the economic feasibility of projects. This study presents an investigation about optimal daylight design solutions for a classroom in the Quebec climate. A parametric model and a generative process was developed to optimize a skylight and a light shelf to improve uniformity while providing adequate daylight in classrooms with different orientations. The methods and outcomes which includes economic considerations represent a useful insight for designers and researchers.
keywords Daylight Optimization, Iterative Design, Cost-Effective Design, School Buildings, Climate-based Daylight Modelling
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2024/04/22 07:10

_id ecaade2023_389
id ecaade2023_389
authors Szentesi-Nejur, Szende, de Luca, Francesco, Nejur, Andrei and Madelat, Payam
year 2023
title Early Design Clustering Method Considering Equitable Daylight Distribution in The Adaptive Re-Use of Heritage Buildings
source Dokonal, W, Hirschberg, U and Wurzer, G (eds.), Digital Design Reconsidered - Proceedings of the 41st Conference on Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (eCAADe 2023) - Volume 2, Graz, 20-22 September 2023, pp. 105–114
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2023.2.105
summary The re-use of existing buildings is gaining importance worldwide in the context of the carbon reduction efforts. In the case of Québec City there is a large number of heritage buildings that are currently unused. There are ongoing projects to breathe new life in these buildings, mainly by converting them in residential units. At the same time there is a growing preoccupation in Québec province towards energy efficiency and proper daylighting in both new and existing buildings. This is reflected in the emergence of new regulations concerning new buildings. In relation to existing buildings there are no regulations, but optimal daylight is a desired feature that can contribute significantly to the quality and attractiveness of newly designed spaces in the existing premises. In the case of heritage buildings, the additional conceptual challenge is to create properly daylit spaces while maintaining the character defining elements of the building, including facades and openings. Therefore, a digital workflow was developed to be integrated in the earliest schematic phase of design to ensure an equitable distribution of existing daylight in the newly created spatial units of heritage buildings. The method is based on an adapted constrained K-means clustering algorithm that works on daylight simulation data.
keywords adaptive re-use, heritage buildings, daylight optimization, clustering method, early design digital tools
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2023/12/10 10:49

_id 988c
authors Szewczyk, Jaroslaw and Jakimowicz, Adam
year 2001
title Multi User Interface Problems in Current CAD Systems
source Stellingwerff, Martijn and Verbeke, Johan (Eds.), ACCOLADE - Architecture, Collaboration, Design. Delft University Press (DUP Science) / ISBN 90-407-2216-1 / The Netherlands, pp. 183-194 [Book ordering info: m.c.stellingwerff@bk.tudelft.nl]
summary The general problem of software and hardware interface has been discussed since the first personal computers had appeared on the market. Interface solutions, proposed by the CAD software producers themselves, have been deeply criticised. In fact, learning how to use the software means how to operate its interface. In the process of software developments, interfaces became 'second languages', which are to be learnt by the user. This is a real problem especially for the beginner. The problem is even more complicated in case of interfaces for many users. They should help in the processes of computer networks based cooperative design. In this paper we try to juxtapose the main features of user interfaces in CAD, especially ones for collaborative work. The most important problems were detected, and conclusions were made with an aim to research interfaces adequate for architect's work in the future.
series other
email
last changed 2001/09/14 21:30

_id e16c
authors Szewczyk, Jaroslaw
year 2002
title The Limitations of Architectural XML-Powered Databases: Open Standards Versus XML Glue
source CAADRIA 2002 [Proceedings of the 7th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia / ISBN 983-2473-42-X] Cyberjaya (Malaysia) 18–20 April 2002, pp. 065-72
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.caadria.2002.065
summary The paper deals with the limitations of architectural XMLpowered databases, focusing on flexibility of data notations. Standard commercial notations are taken under consideration, to recognize XML potential in processing open, scientific architectural data.
series CAADRIA
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id e80d
authors Szewczyk, Jaroslaw
year 2002
title Architectural Meaning in the Existing Architectural Notations - The Technologies for Interoperable Architectural Data Management
source Connecting the Real and the Virtual - design e-ducation [20th eCAADe Conference Proceedings / ISBN 0-9541183-0-8] Warsaw (Poland) 18-20 September 2002, pp. 230-237
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2002.230
summary The paper presents results of investigations upon possible representations of architectural objects containing ‘architectural meaning’. Five groups of such existing representations are analyzed briefly: (1) structural EXPRESS–based definitions, (2) object EXPRESS- and IFC- based notations, (3) XML-based notations, (4) experimental ones, and (5) binary notations. The working taxonomy of the notations is presented and their shortcomings are mentioned. The potential of XML notations for CAD data has been recognized by software vendors and standard organizations all over the world. Many corporations and standardization bodies are developing XML-based notations of CAD data, focusing on interoperability problems. Some of these notations are becoming standards (aecXML, i-drop), influencing the development of all CAAD industry. There are some main groups of problems with the existing commercial standards: Lack of ‘open’ data in its ‘open’ context, lack of architectural meaning in commercial notations, problems with simpler intuitive standards for notation of conceptual design data in early design stages, too complex data semantics, too atomized data, and richness of the data structures. The problems are taken under consideration in order to discuss the present state of architectural standards. Nowadays architects are forced to work with semi-architectural notations, lacking their essence, i.e. lacking methods to describe elements of cultural heritage connected to geometry forms. Instead of language of architecture they deal with virtual cyber-slang.
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id c218
authors Szovenyi-Lux, Miklos
year 1997
title Archicad for Teamwork - A New Concept in CAD Teamworking
source Challenges of the Future [15th eCAADe Conference Proceedings / ISBN 0-9523687-3-0] Vienna (Austria) 17-20 September 1997
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.1997.x.k0s
summary Architects are often obliged to use CAD and even to show a 3D CAD model of their design (that most CAD programs are capable of doing now) and most people are mislead by such slogans as the 3D is the most important part of a design although its just like drafting from other tricky viewpoints. We all know that a building is far more complex than the a bundle of sections, elevations and perspective views. It's a model of space where all building construction parts and other effects (even time, sunshine), that create and help to communicate this space have very complex cross references with each other. If we want to describe it with a program we have to create a digital building, and architects have to communicate this digital building towards each other in the design phase, if more than one architect or engineer is working on the building simultaneously.
keywords Teamwork
series eCAADe
email
more http://info.tuwien.ac.at/ecaade/proc/szovenyi/szovenyi.htm
last changed 2022/06/07 07:50

_id 0465
authors Szövényi-Lux, Miklós
year 1994
title Virtual Future!?
source The Virtual Studio [Proceedings of the 12th European Conference on Education in Computer Aided Architectural Design / ISBN 0-9523687-0-6] Glasgow (Scotland) 7-10 September 1994, p. 215
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.1994.x.o0h
summary Architecture was born long, long ago with the help of those people who first realised that they are not only building houses but, what is more important, thrilling and has been the focus of many debates, creating space. In the beginning man created space by adding and combining different volumes of masses. They thought that space can be perceived as determined by different points of orientation placed around us. Later people started to realise that perception of space is a little bit more sophisticated. Perhaps everybody has smiled at a baby who standing up for the first time in his life in his playpen, extending his hands towards objects on the nearby table physically unreachable for him. If he was an adult, people would think perhaps something is wrong with him, when he extends his hands towards things we surely know are impossible to reach from his actual position. So how come we can judge with exactitude the place of different objects in space? Maybe by the time needed for the movement to get there. Let us not forget that the baby's first real movement is when he starts to walk and then he starts to get the feeling of this three dimensional world, around which can be only realised simultaneously in space and time. Anyone can say that this is an interesting theory, but who cares? It is said that most of the architects, who are real designers have a keen sense of creating and perceiving space. They are far more interested in the perfection of the created space with all its details than anything else. And here is where a CAD program can come into the picture. Talking about a real CAD program that means from the point of view of a designer, a silent friend who never cheats or boasts, who takes him in SPACE wherever he wants to go and shows him his CREATION as an extending arm between his imagination and the reality.
series eCAADe
last changed 2022/06/07 07:50

_id sigradi2016_728
id sigradi2016_728
authors Sáez Gutiérrez, Nicolás Antonio; Gatica Laurie, Braulio
year 2016
title Réplica Virtual. Ca?mara obscura con disen?o paramétrico y fabricación digital. Una arquitectura de la imagen virtual [Virtual Replica. Camera Obscure With Parametric Design and Digital Fabrication. An Architecture of the Virtual Image]
source SIGraDi 2016 [Proceedings of the 20th Conference of the Iberoamerican Society of Digital Graphics - ISBN: 978-956-7051-86-1] Argentina, Buenos Aires 9 - 11 November 2016, pp.885-891
summary Virtual Replica is a contemporary artistic project that reflects upon our relation with the world. It is a camera (room) obscuradesigned with the aid of parametric software in order to be fabricated with CNC technology based on thin layers of plywood. An ephemeral architecture that creates an immersive experience for the visitor who is surrounded by a number of “virtual screens” exhibiting inverted images of the immediate exterior. This paper proposes the phenomenon of camera obscura as a proto building that gives life to an architecture of the image, using it as its built as well as its theoretical fundamental reference.
keywords Camera Oscura; Image Architecture; Parametric Design; Digital Fabrication; Contemporary Art
series SIGRADI
email
last changed 2021/03/28 19:59

_id sigradi2005_257
id sigradi2005_257
authors Sánchez Cavazos, Ma. Estela; Adolfo Benito Narváez Tijerina
year 2005
title The digital visualization of the future architecture and the intellectual operations
source SIGraDi 2005 - [Proceedings of the 9th Iberoamerican Congress of Digital Graphics] Lima - Peru 21-24 november 2005, vol. 1, pp. 257-263
summary It is sustained here that the designer before carrying out any trace (digital or similar) on the architectural design to solve, the person carries out a series of intellectual operations that allow him/her to carry out this traces with more precision, delimitation, knowing the space that will be realized in future. This work explains how the digital visualization of the architecture will be carried out in a future, based on the construction of the knowledge that Piaget proposes about the cognitive structures and the significant learning, as well as the metacognición that Vygotsky and Ausubel; the topic of the language is also approached, because it is thought that the language is very related with the figuration element that is presented in the document as one of the intellectual operations and the pattern that Wittgenstein exposes in its book “Tractatus, logical-philosophicus”, where he explains how the figuration is given by means of the interrelation among the elements of the figure and how it comes from the linguistic question. This helps to understand the design process in its initial stage (mayeutic) and has a pedagogic application. [Full paper in Spanish]
series SIGRADI
email
last changed 2016/03/10 10:01

_id sigradi2005_499
id sigradi2005_499
authors Sánchez-del-Valle, Carmina
year 2005
title Robot toys, complexity, and computation: for a transformable architecture
source SIGraDi 2005 - [Proceedings of the 9th Iberoamerican Congress of Digital Graphics] Lima - Peru 21-24 november 2005, vol. 1, pp. 499-504
summary In this paper we describe and discuss a course aimed towards developing 3D digital modeling skills focused on the exploration of an architecture that behaves like a dynamic complex integrated system. It crosses knowledge domains to consider the mechanisms that transform energy, adaptive systems, kinetics, and cybernetics. It uses the metaphor of transformable robot toys not only for their correspondence with the ideas explored, but because of their immediacy and physicality. It argues architecture must urgently break with the processes of destruction. [Full paper in Spanish]
series SIGRADI
email
last changed 2016/03/10 10:01

_id ecaade2021_237
id ecaade2021_237
authors Sönmez, Ayça and Gönenç Sorguç, Arzu
year 2021
title Computer-Aided Fabrication Technologies as Computational Design Mediators
source Stojakovic, V and Tepavcevic, B (eds.), Towards a new, configurable architecture - Proceedings of the 39th eCAADe Conference - Volume 1, University of Novi Sad, Novi Sad, Serbia, 8-10 September 2021, pp. 465-474
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2021.1.465
summary The developments in recent technologies through Industry 4.0 lead to the integration of digital design and manufacturing processes. Albeit manufacturing continues to increase its importance as design input, it is generally considered at the last stages of the design process. This misconception results in a gap between digital design and fabrication, leading to differences between the initial design and the fabricated outcome in the context of architectural tectonics. Here, we present an artificial intelligence (AI)-based approach that aims to provide a basis to bridge the gap between computation and fabrication. We considered a case study of a 3D model in two stages. In the first stage, an intuitive and top-down design process is adopted, and in the second stage, an AI-based exploration is conducted with three cases derived from the same 3D model. The outcomes of the two stages provided a dataset including different design parameters to be used in a decision tree classifier algorithm which selects the manufacturing method for a given 3D model. Our results show that generative design simulations based on manufacturing constraints can provide a significant variety of manufacturable design alternatives, and minimizes the difference between design alternatives. Using our proposed approach, the time spent in form-finding and fabrication can be reduced significantly. Additionally, the implementation of decision tree classifier learning algorithm shows that AI can serve designers to make accurate predictions for manufacturing method.
keywords Generative Design; Computer-Aided Fabrication; Arcihtecture 4.0; Artificial Intelligence; Digital Tectonics
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

_id ecaade2018_289
id ecaade2018_289
authors Sönmez, Orkun and Gönenç Sorguç, Arzu
year 2018
title Evaluating an Immersive Virtual Learning Environment for Learning How to Design in Human-Scale
source Kepczynska-Walczak, A, Bialkowski, S (eds.), Computing for a better tomorrow - Proceedings of the 36th eCAADe Conference - Volume 1, Lodz University of Technology, Lodz, Poland, 19-21 September 2018, pp. 371-378
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2018.1.371
summary This paper presents a part of a thesis research conducted at METU. It proposes a method for evaluating the effects of an immersive virtual learning environment (IVLE) which is integrated in an architectural design/learning activity. Proposed IVLE application and design/learning activity were designed through a synthesis on constructive learning, problem-based learning, immersive technologies, and intended learning outcomes (ILOs) in learning how to design in human-scale. Immersive experience of bodily interactions and problem solving process are focused. Method of evaluation was also developed over this synthesis, and an evaluation rubric was created based on the SOLO taxonomy. According to the evaluation method, a before-and-after test was conducted within a case study involving a particular scenario of design exercise and interviews. Conclusions are based on the results of this case study.
keywords VR in architecture; immersive virtual learning environment; learning modalities; SOLO Taxonomy
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2022/06/07 07:56

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