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 1464

_id acadia22pr_172
id acadia22pr_172
authors Huang, Lee-Su; Spaw, Gregory Thomas
year 2022
title Robotically Bent Spatial Metal Knots - Re-Interpreting Spatial Knotting Through Robotic Tube Bending
source ACADIA 2022: Hybrids and Haecceities [Projects Catalog of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Association of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9860805-7-4]. University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design. 27-29 October 2022. edited by M. Akbarzadeh, D. Aviv, H. Jamelle, and R. Stuart-Smith. 172-177.
summary The studies presented in this project employ workflows that enable multi-planar robotic bending of metal tubes with high accuracy and repeatability using a 6-axis industrial robot with a custom end-effector and external 2-axis positioner. This enables quick fabrication and assembly of complex spatial tubular configurations without the need for jigs or falsework support. The method makes possible the accurate fabrication of complex, closed polyline curve loop configurations that are topologically similar to knots in mathematical knot theory
series ACADIA
type project
email
last changed 2024/02/06 14:06

_id acadia23_v2_340
id acadia23_v2_340
authors Huang, Lee-Su; Spaw, Gregory
year 2023
title Augmented Reality Assisted Robotic: Tube Bending
source ACADIA 2023: Habits of the Anthropocene: Scarcity and Abundance in a Post-Material Economy [Volume 2: Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Conference for the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9891764-0-3]. Denver. 26-28 October 2023. edited by A. Crawford, N. Diniz, R. Beckett, J. Vanucchi, M. Swackhamer 340-349.
summary The intent of this research is to study potential improvements and optimizations in the context of robotic fabrication paired with Augmented Reality (AR), leveraging the technology in the fabrication of the individual part, as well as guiding the larger assembly process. AR applications within the Architecture, Engineering, and Construction (AEC) industry have seen constant research and development as designers, fabricators, and contractors seek methods to reduce errors, minimize waste, and optimize efficiency to lower costs (Chi, Kang, and Wang 2013). Recent advancements have made the technology very accessible and feasible for use in the field, as demonstrated by seminal projects such as the Steampunk Pavilion in Tallinn, Estonia (Jahn, Newnham, and Berg 2022). These types of projects typically improve manual craft processes. They often provide projective guidelines, and make possible complex geometries that would otherwise be painstakingly slow to complete and require decades of artisanal experience (Jahn et al. 2019). Building upon a previously developed robotic tube bending workflow, our research implements a custom AR interface to streamline the bending process for multiple, large, complex parts with many bends, providing a pre-visualization of the expected fabrication process for safety and part-verification purposes. We demonstrate the utility of this AR overlay in the part fabrication setting and in an inadvertent, human-robot, collaborative process when parts push the fabrication method past its limits. The AR technology is also used to facilitate the assembly process of a spatial installation exploring a unique aesthetic with subtle bends, loops, knots, bundles, and weaves utilizing a rigid tube material.
series ACADIA
type paper
email
last changed 2024/12/20 09:12

_id acadia23_v1_196
id acadia23_v1_196
authors Bao, Ding Wen; Yan, Xin; Min Xie, Yi
year 2023
title Intelligent Form
source ACADIA 2023: Habits of the Anthropocene: Scarcity and Abundance in a Post-Material Economy [Volume 1: Projects Catalog of the 43rd Annual Conference of the Association of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9860805-8-1]. Denver. 26-28 October 2023. edited by A. Crawford, N. Diniz, R. Beckett, J. Vanucchi, M. Swackhamer 196-201.
summary InterLoop employs previously developed workflows that enable multi-planar robotic bending of metal tubes with high accuracy and repeatability (Huang and Spaw 2022). The scale and complexity is managed by employing augmented reality (AR) technology in two capacities, fabrication and assembly (Jahn et al. 2018; Jahn, Newnham, and Berg 2022). The AR display overlays part numbers, bending sequences, expected geometry, and robot movements in real time as the robot fabrication is occurring. For assembly purposes, part numbers, centerlines, and their expected positional relationships are projected via quick response (QR) codes spatially tracked by the Microsoft Hololens 2 (Microsoft 2019). This is crucial due to the length and self-similarity of complex multi-planar parts that make them difficult to distinguish and orient correctly. Leveraging augmented reality technology and robotic fabrication uncovers a novel material expression in tubular structures with bundles, knots, and interweaving (Figure 1).
series ACADIA
type project
email
last changed 2024/04/17 13:58

_id acadia23_v1_180
id acadia23_v1_180
authors Huang, Lee-Su; Spaw, Gregory
year 2023
title InterLoop
source ACADIA 2023: Habits of the Anthropocene: Scarcity and Abundance in a Post-Material Economy [Volume 1: Projects Catalog of the 43rd Annual Conference of the Association of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9860805-8-1]. Denver. 26-28 October 2023. edited by A. Crawford, N. Diniz, R. Beckett, J. Vanucchi, M. Swackhamer 180-187.
summary InterLoop employs previously developed workflows that enable multi-planar robotic bending of metal tubes with high accuracy and repeatability (Huang and Spaw 2022). The scale and complexity is managed by employing augmented reality (AR) technology in two capacities, fabrication and assembly (Jahn et al. 2018; Jahn, Newnham, and Berg 2022). The AR display overlays part numbers, bending sequences, expected geometry, and robot movements in real time as the robot fabrication is occurring. For assembly purposes, part numbers, centerlines, and their expected positional relationships are projected via quick response (QR) codes spatially tracked by the Microsoft Hololens 2 (Microsoft 2019). This is crucial due to the length and self-similarity of complex multi-planar parts that make them difficult to distinguish and orient correctly. Leveraging augmented reality technology and robotic fabrication uncovers a novel material expression in tubular structures with bundles, knots, and interweaving (Figure 1).
series ACADIA
type project
email
last changed 2024/04/17 13:58

_id acadia22pr_154
id acadia22pr_154
authors Lok, Leslie; Zivkovic, Sasa
year 2022
title UNLOG: A Deployable and Lightweight Timber Frame
source ACADIA 2022: Hybrids and Haecceities [Projects Catalog of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Association of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9860805-7-4]. University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design. 27-29 October 2022. edited by M. Akbarzadeh, D. Aviv, H. Jamelle, and R. Stuart-Smith. 154-159.
summary Easily deployed and assembled, UNLOG unfolds several logs into an undulating and lightweight timber A-frame structure through robotic kerfing and bending-active kinematics. The installation provokes new methods of framing for timber construction.
series ACADIA
type project
email
last changed 2024/02/06 14:06

_id ecaade2022_303
id ecaade2022_303
authors Papandreou, Marielena, Baseta, Efilena, Mathe, Arpan, Blackburn, Robert Michael and Murugesan, Libish
year 2022
title Programming Twist - Exploring the geometric affordances of aluminum through flexible robotic workflows
doi https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2022.2.399
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 2, Ghent, 13-16 September 2022, pp. 399–408
summary This paper explores the geometric affordances of aluminium through flexible robotic workflows. The geometric abundance of the discussed workflows goes beyond what the state-of-the-art industrial metal forming processes offer, and is achieved with simpler means. Two fabrication methodologies, folding and pressing, were explored in order to convert flat, straight panels into twisted, 3-dimensional shapes. The design method for both fabrication strategies was based on physics simulation, where several geometrical constraints force a real time deformation while maintaining the properties of a developable strip. In the first fabrication approach, directionality of the rulings is first engraved into the material while the folding angle is controlled by the robotic setup with two gripping stations. The second fabrication approach refers to a forming process. This has been achieved by installing a wheel cutter on a small workshop hydraulic press and a robot feeding the material into the forming station. The design-to-production pipelines are automated and designed for a small payload robot that allows for a large variety of geometric possibilities. Fabrication challenges of both processes have been documented and assessed, while workflow optimization scenarios and future improvements are proposed in the outlook.
keywords Developable Strips, Physics Simulation, Design-to-Production Pipelines, Robotic Bending, Metal Forming
series eCAADe
email
last changed 2024/04/22 07:10

_id acadia22_392
id acadia22_392
authors Soana, Valentina; Shi, Yichao; Lin, Tongyao; Ma, Yiting; Dai, Ling
year 2022
title LOOPS; A Mobile, Shape-Changing Architectural System: Robotically-Actuated Bending-Active Tensile Hybrid Modules
source ACADIA 2022: Hybrids and Haecceities [Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Association of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9860805-8-1]. University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design. 27-29 October 2022. edited by M. Akbarzadeh, D. Aviv, H. Jamelle, and R. Stuart-Smith. 392-405.
summary LOOPS is a mobile and shape-changing architectural system that achieves multiple states through robotically controlled elastic material deformations. LOOPS is part of a wider research agenda on elastic robotic structures (ERS). ERS are lightweight, adaptive and can perform multiple behaviors with material and actuation efficiency, leveraging the capability of elastic materials to undertake large deformations.
series ACADIA
type paper
email
last changed 2024/02/06 14:04

_id sigradi2018_1609
id sigradi2018_1609
authors Chia, Hsu Yi; Hsien, Hsu Pei
year 2018
title The fabrication and application of parametric inflatable structure
source SIGraDi 2018 [Proceedings of the 22nd Conference of the Iberoamerican Society of Digital Graphics - ISSN: 2318-6968] Brazil, São Carlos 7 - 9 November 2018, pp. 684-689
summary This study uses parametric design to optimize the process and application of the inflatable method. Inflatable design has advantages of light weight, integral forming, volume change, etc., but the manufacturing process often requires the development of molds, a large number of manual heat seals, etc. Inspired by the structure principle of amputated wing tube structure, coupled with the advantages of parameterization and digital tool heat sealing, The same material can be made at different tightness, because the tight design with different angles has more structural characteristics and bending properties, thereby generating more complex spatial structures. Different materials also have corresponding manufacturing methods, which also increase the opportunities for application in architectural design.
keywords Robotic arms fabrication; Inflatable Shape-change; pneumatic; bending mechanism; pavilion design;
series SIGRADI
email
last changed 2021/03/28 19:58

_id acadia23_v2_318
id acadia23_v2_318
authors Spencer, Lawson; Htet Kyaw, Alexander; Zivkovic, Sasa; Lok, Leslie
year 2023
title Extended Reality Workflows for Multi-Material Construction and Assemblies
source ACADIA 2023: Habits of the Anthropocene: Scarcity and Abundance in a Post-Material Economy [Volume 2: Proceedings of the 43rd Annual Conference for the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9891764-0-3]. Denver. 26-28 October 2023. edited by A. Crawford, N. Diniz, R. Beckett, J. Vanucchi, M. Swackhamer 318-328.
summary The architecture and construction industries have been developing methods to integrate Augmented Reality (AR) and Mixed Reality (MR) workflows into the building industry for 1-to-1 scale design, visualization, and paperless fabrication. While these AR workflows have been primarily focused on mono-material assemblies, this paper investigates the potential of AR and MR for multi-material fabrication, combining various materials and structural components throughout each phase of the construction of the Unlog Tower. The installation uses infested and dying ash trees to construct a 36-foot-tall triangular, lightweight timber structure. The Unlog Tower leverages bending active elastic kinematics to stretch robotically kerfed logs braced by threaded rods and tube steel. Three extended reality (XR) workflows were explored for the construction of this bespoke timber struc- ture: (1) fiducial marker coordinated AR instruction, (2) multiple QR code AR instruction, and (3) gesture-based MR instruction. These XR workflows incorporate feedback-based construction notation and animation for the assembly of non-standard natural materials and standardized parts through three construction phases: materials to parts, parts to prefab modules, and onsite assembly. The research highlights the potential of AR and MR workflows for human-machine interaction in robotic fabrication, analog means of making, prefabrication, onsite construction, and coordination. The result of this investigation has demonstrated many advantages and disadvantages of varying AR/MR workflows in facili- tating the construction of multi-material and multi-phase structural assemblies.
series ACADIA
type paper
email
last changed 2024/12/20 09:12

_id architectural_intelligence2022_6
id architectural_intelligence2022_6
authors Achim Menges, Fabian Kannenberg & Christoph Zechmeister
year 2022
title Computational co-design of fibrous architecture
doi https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1007/s44223-022-00004-x
source Architectural Intelligence Journal
summary Fibrous architecture constitutes an alternative approach to conventional building systems and established construction methods. It shows the potential to converge architectural concerns such as spatial expression and structural elegance, with urgently required resource effectiveness and material efficiency, in a genuinely computational approach. Fundamental characteristics of fibre composite are shared with fibre structures in the natural world, enabling the transfer of design principles and providing a vast repertoire of inspiration. Robotic fabrication based on coreless filament winding, a technique to deposit resin impregnated fibre filaments with only minimal formwork, as well as integrative computational design methods are imperative to the development of complex fibrous building systems. Two projects, the BUGA Fibre Pavilion as an example for long-span structures, and Maison Fibre as an example of multi-storey architecture, showcase the application of those techniques in an architectural context and highlight areas of further research opportunities. The highly interrelated aesthetic, structural and fabrication characteristics of fibre nets are difficult to understand and go beyond a designer’s comprehension and intuition. An AI powered, self-learning agent system aims to extend and thoroughly explore the design space of fibre structures to unlock the full design potential coreless filament winding offers. In order to ensure feedback between all relevant design and performance criteria and enable interdisciplinary convergence, these novel design methods are embedded in a larger co-design framework. It formalizes the interaction of involved interdisciplinary domains and allows for interactive collaboration based on a central data model, serving as a base for design optimisation and exploration. To further advance research on fibre composites in architecture, bio-based materials are considered, continuing the journey of discovery of fibrous architecture to fundamentally rethinking design and construction towards a novel, computational material culture in architecture.
series Architectural Intelligence
email
last changed 2025/01/09 15:00

_id acadia22_604
id acadia22_604
authors Adel, Arash
year 2022
title Co-Robotic Assembly of Nonstandard Timber Structures
source ACADIA 2022: Hybrids and Haecceities [Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Association of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9860805-8-1]. University of Pennsylvania Stuart Weitzman School of Design. 27-29 October 2022. edited by M. Akbarzadeh, D. Aviv, H. Jamelle, and R. Stuart-Smith. 604-613.
summary This paper presents a novel approach for the construction of nonstandard timber structures made from regionally sourced short dimensional lumber, which is enabled through human-robot collaborative assembly (HRCA). To address the research question, three main research objectives are identified and experimentally explored: 1) Characterization of a comprehensive construction process, which consists of off-site HRCA of bespoke timber sub-assemblies, 2) Development of a suitable constructive system for robotic assembly, making feasible the realization of articulated structures out of short timber elements, and 3) Incorporation of these techniques and their constraints into an integrative digital design and fabrication method and implementation of a continuous digital design-to-fabrication workflow. 
series ACADIA
type paper
email
last changed 2024/02/06 14:04

_id cdrf2022_89
id cdrf2022_89
authors Alberto Fernández González
year 2022
title Cellular Automata, Memory and Intelligence
doi https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-8637-6_8
source Proceedings of the 2022 DigitalFUTURES The 4st International Conference on Computational Design and Robotic Fabrication (CDRF 2022)
summary Understanding memory as the faculty by which a system stores and remembers information from the past to a new purpose with shapes that are emerging as “collective designs"(a repository of built information), this research works with the demonstration in how CA can generate a trace of its existence as memory based on the activation and deactivation of the discrete system in which grows, like a footprint in the affected area of intervention, improving a “stigmergic operation” in the field, conditioning the following steps in the collaborative growing of this basal structure. Based on sets of digital experiments, a set of CA using Langton Ants generates different solutions based on the activation and deactivation of rules according to information coming from patterns, creating spatial solutions that deal with built memory three-dimensional emergent structures.
series cdrf
email
last changed 2024/05/29 14:02

_id acadia23_v1_136
id acadia23_v1_136
authors Alima, Natalia
year 2023
title InterspeciesForms
source ACADIA 2023: Habits of the Anthropocene: Scarcity and Abundance in a Post-Material Economy [Volume 1: Projects Catalog of the 43rd Annual Conference of the Association of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) ISBN 979-8-9860805-8-1]. Denver. 26-28 October 2023. edited by A. Crawford, N. Diniz, R. Beckett, J. Vanucchi, M. Swackhamer 136-143.
summary The hybridization of architectural, biological and robotic agencies Situated in the field of architectural biodesign, InterspeciesForms explores a closer relationship between the fungus Pleurotus ostreatus and the designer in the creation of form. The intention of hybridizing mycelia’s agency of growth with architectural design intention is to generate novel, non-indexical crossbred designed outcomes that evolve preconceived notions of architectural form. Mycelium are threadlike fibrous root systems made up of hyphae, that form the vegetative part of a fungus (Jones 2020). Known as the hackers of the wood wide web (Simard 1997) mycelia form complex symbiotic relationships with other species that inhabit our earth. Michael Lim states “Fungi redefine resourcefulness, collaboration, resilience and symbiosis” (Lim 2022, p. 14). When wandering around the forest to connect with other species or searching for food, fungi form elaborate and entangled networks by spreading their hyphal tips. Shown in Figure 1, this living labyrinth results in the aesthetic formation of an intricate web. Due to the organisms ability to determine the most effective direction of growth, communicate with its surrounding ecosystem, and connect with other species, fungi are indeed an intelligent species with a unique aesthetic that must not be ignored. In drawing on these concepts, I refer to the organism’s ability to search for, tangle, and digest its surroundings as ‘mycelia agency of growth’. It is this specific behavioral characteristic that is the focus of this research, with which I, as the architect, set out to co-create and hybridize with.
series ACADIA
type project
email
last changed 2024/04/17 13:58

_id cdrf2022_293
id cdrf2022_293
authors Amal Algamdey, Aleksander Mastalski, Angelos Chronis, Amar Gurung, Felipe Romero Vargas, German Bodenbender, and Lea Khairallah
year 2022
title AI Urban Voids: A Data-Driven Approach to Urban Activation
doi https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-8637-6_26
source Proceedings of the 2022 DigitalFUTURES The 4st International Conference on Computational Design and Robotic Fabrication (CDRF 2022)
summary With the development of digital technologies, big urban data is now readily available online. This opens the opportunity to utilize new data and create new relationships within multiple urban features for cities. Moreover, new computational design techniques open a new portal for architects and designers to reinterpret this urban data and provide much better-informed design decisions. The “AI Urban Voids'' project is defined as a data-driven approach to analyze and predict the strategic location for urban uses in the addition of amenities within the city. The location of these urban amenities is evaluated based on predictions and scores followed by a series of urban analyses and simulations using K-Means clustering. Furthermore, these results are then visualized in a web-based platform; likewise, the aim is to create a tool that will work on a feedback loop system that constantly updates the information. This paper explains the use of different datasets from Five cities including Melbourne, Sydney, Berlin, Warsaw, and Sao Paulo. Python, Osmx libraries and K-means clustering open the way to manipulate large data sets by introducing a collection of computational processes that can override traditional urban analysis.
series cdrf
email
last changed 2024/05/29 14:02

_id cdrf2022_150
id cdrf2022_150
authors Ana Zimbarg
year 2022
title Mapping Plant Microclimates on Building Envelope Using Environmental Analysis Tools
doi https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-8637-6_13
source Proceedings of the 2022 DigitalFUTURES The 4st International Conference on Computational Design and Robotic Fabrication (CDRF 2022)
summary Can we build our cities not only for humans but also for all living systems? How can we consider other species occupants of the built environment? Planning cities as an element of the natural domain can reshape our relationship with nature and help redefine sustainability in architecture. Although current design strategies of reducing energy use does not rectify past/continuing im-balances in the natural environment. Landscape architect John Tillman Lyle expanded the regenerative design concept based on a range of ecological concepts. The environment's complexity, and the urge to use resources smartly, encouraged him to think about architecture and the environment as a whole system. John Lyle's regenerative design strategies scaffold a conceptual framework of treating the building as part of the landscape. Environmental tools such as Ladybug can map out the different conditions surrounding the building's envelope. This information can assist in selecting and populating a building façade with suitable plant species. The framework presents the building as a feature in the landscape, creating microclimatic conditions for various plant habitats. This conceptual workflow has the potential to become a tool to include regenerative principles in the urban context.
series cdrf
email
last changed 2024/05/29 14:02

_id cdrf2022_478
id cdrf2022_478
authors Andrea Macruz, Mirko Daneluzzo, and Hind Tawaku
year 2022
title Performative Ornament: Enhancing Humidity and Light Levels for Plants in Multispecies Design
doi https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-8637-6_41
source Proceedings of the 2022 DigitalFUTURES The 4st International Conference on Computational Design and Robotic Fabrication (CDRF 2022)
summary The paper shifts the design conversation from a human-centered design methodology to a posthuman design, considering human and nonhuman actors. It asks how designers can incorporate a multispecies approach to creating greater intelligence and performance projects. To illustrate this, we describe a project of “ornaments” for plants, culminating from a course in an academic setting. The project methodology starts with “Thing Ethnography” analyzing the movement of a water bottle inside a house and its interaction with different objects. The relationship between water and plant was chosen to be further developed, considering water as a material to increase environmental humidity for the plant and brightness through light reflectance and refraction. 3D printed biomimetic structures as supports for water droplets were designed according to their performance and placed in different arrangements around the plant itself. Humidity levels and illuminance of the structures were measured. Ultimately, this created a new approach for working with plants and mass customization. The paper discusses the resultant evidence-based design and environmental values.
series cdrf
email
last changed 2024/05/29 14:03

_id cdrf2022_304
id cdrf2022_304
authors Anni Dai
year 2022
title Co-creation: Space Reconfiguration by Architect and Agent Simulation Based Machine Learning
doi https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-8637-6_27
source Proceedings of the 2022 DigitalFUTURES The 4st International Conference on Computational Design and Robotic Fabrication (CDRF 2022)
summary This research is a manifestation of architectural co-creation between agent simulation based machine learning and an architect’s tacit knowledge. Instead of applying machine learning brains to agents, the author reversed the idea and applied machine learning to buildings. The project used agent simulation as a database, and trained the space to reconfigure itself based on its distance to the nearest agents. To overcome the limitations of machine learning model’s simplified solutions to complicated architectural environments, the author introduced a co-creation method, where an architect uses tacit knowledge to overwatch and have real-time control over the space reconfiguration process. This research combines both the strength of machine learning’s data-processing ability and an architect’s tacit knowledge. Through exploration of emerging technologies such as machine learning and agent simulation, the author highlights limitations in design automation. By combining an architect’s tacit knowledge with a new generation design method of agent simulation based machine learning, the author hopes to explore a new way for architects to co-create with machines.
series cdrf
email
last changed 2024/05/29 14:02

_id sigradi2022_24
id sigradi2022_24
authors Aroca Vega, Cristian; Rozas Valenzuela, Sebastián
year 2022
title Soft Architecture: Application of Soft Robotics in the Design of Responsive-Interactive Architecture
source Herrera, PC, Dreifuss-Serrano, C, Gómez, P, Arris-Calderon, LF, Critical Appropriations - Proceedings of the XXVI Conference of the Iberoamerican Society of Digital Graphics (SIGraDi 2022), Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas, Lima, 7-11 November 2022 , pp. 373–384
summary The main objective of this research is to develop a method that can integrate responsive and interactive architecture through the application of soft robotics on a façade. To achieve this objective, a review of the main concepts, adaptive architecture (responsive-interactive) and soft robotics was first carried out. Secondly, recent studies and research that speak of the application of soft robotics in architecture are analyzed. With the knowledge acquired in the analyzes and reference studies, together with the help of programming and computational design tools, a scalable physical prototype was developed that manages to integrate both types of adaptive behaviors (responsive-interactive) in a single hybrid robotic system (soft-rigid), demonstrating the potential of soft robotics in architecture, in this case being applied to be sensitive and act on changes in temperature produced by solar radiation.
keywords Robotics, Generative Design, Adaptive architecture, Sustainable Design, Soft
series SIGraDi
email
last changed 2023/05/16 16:55

_id sigradi2022_243
id sigradi2022_243
authors Banda, Pablo; Carrasco-Pérez, Patricio; García-Alvarado, Rodrigo; Munoz-Sanguinetti, Claudia
year 2022
title Planning & Design Platform of Buildings By Robotic Additive Manufacturing for Construction.
source Herrera, PC, Dreifuss-Serrano, C, Gómez, P, Arris-Calderon, LF, Critical Appropriations - Proceedings of the XXVI Conference of the Iberoamerican Society of Digital Graphics (SIGraDi 2022), Universidad Peruana de Ciencias Aplicadas, Lima, 7-11 November 2022 , pp. 421–430
summary The following paper describes and comments a construction planning platform for the Additive Manufacturing of wall modules, as a set of design and planning actions that interwove robotic, material capacities and spatial characteristics. Goal here is to take semi-conventional strategy and augment the algorithmic process for design and knowledge acquisition regarding design oriented to 3D Printing Construction.
keywords Additive Manufacturing for Construction, 3D Printing, Digital Fabrication, Parametric Design
series SIGraDi
email
last changed 2023/05/16 16:56

_id ijac202220101
id ijac202220101
authors Bao, Ding Wen; Xin Yan, Yi Min Xie
year 2022
title Encoding topological optimisation logical structure rules into multi-agent system for architectural design and robotic fabrication
source International Journal of Architectural Computing 2022, Vol. 20 - no. 1, pp. 7–17
summary Natural phenomena have been explored as a source of architectural and structural design inspiration with different approaches undertaken within architecture and engineering. The research proposes a connection between two dichotomous principles: architectural complexity and structural efficiency through a hybrid of natural phenomena, topology optimisation and generative design. Both Bi-directional Evolutionary Structural Optimisation (BESO) and multi-agent algorithms are emerging technologies developed into new approaches that transform architectural and structural design, respectively, from the logic of topology optimisation and swarm intelligence. This research aims to explore a structural behaviour feedback loop in designing intricate functional forms through encoding BESO logical structure rules into the multi-agent algorithm. This research intends to study and evaluate the application of topology optimisation and multi-agent system in form-finding and later robotic fabrication through a series of prototypes. It reveals a supposition that the structural behaviour-based design method matches the beauty and function of natural appearance and structure. Thus, a new exploration of architectural design and fabrication strategy is introduced, which benefits the collab- oration among architects, engineers and manufacturers. There is the potential to seek the ornamental complexities in architectural forms and the most efficient use of material based on structural performance in the process of generating complex geometry of the building and its various elements.
keywords Swarm intelligence, multi-agent, bi-directional evolutionary structural optimisation (BESO), intricate architectural form, efficient structure
series journal
last changed 2024/04/17 14:29

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