authors |
Barnes, Thomas |
year |
1990 |
title |
Dynamic Interaction of Solids as a Design Tool |
doi |
https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.acadia.1990.029
|
source |
From Research to Practice [ACADIA Conference Proceedings] Big Sky (Montana - USA) 4-6 October 1990, pp. 29-40 |
summary |
Architectural form and order can sometimes be described as having dynamic characteristics. To capitalize on this notion, physical qualities (mass, velocity, material elasticity, and friction) are given to objects. The objects are set in motion and allowed to interact at will with each other and their environment. The physical qualities are the rules that govern the outcome of interactions. As a result, interactions can lead to affine transformations (translate, scale, rotate), reformations (topological editing), and/or deformations (geometrical editing) of the objects. The designer can investigate the effects of interaction between dynamic elements, vary their physical qualities, and evaluate the appropriateness of the outcome as a solution to the design problem. |
series |
ACADIA |
full text |
file.pdf (1,890,044 bytes) |
references |
Content-type: text/plain
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Ching, F. (1979)
Architecture: Form, Space and Order
, Van Nostrand Reinhold Company, New York, NY.
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Hahn, J. (1988)
Realistic Animation of Rigid Bodies
, Computer Graphics, ACM SIGGRAPH 88 Conference Proceedings
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Moore, M. and Wilhelms, J. (1988)
Collision Detection and Response for Computer Animation
, Computer Graphics, ACM SIGGRAPH Conference Proceedings
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Terzidis, C. (1989)
Transformational Design
, New Ideas and Directions for the 1990īs: ACADIA '89 Proceedings
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last changed |
2022/06/07 07:54 |
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