id |
ecaade2024_000 |
authors |
Kontovourkis, Odysseas; Phocas, Marios C.; Wurzer, Gabriel |
year |
2024 |
title |
eCAADe 2024 Data-Driven Intelligence - Volume 1 |
source |
Kontovourkis, O, Phocas, MC and Wurzer, G (eds.), Data-Driven Intelligence - Proceedings of the 42nd Conference on Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (eCAADe 2024), Nicosia, 11-13 September 2024, Volume 1, 734 p. |
doi |
https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2024.1.001
|
summary |
During the 2020s and beyond, the field of computational design and fabrication will face a number of new challenges and opportunities offered by Artificial Intelligence (AI) and Machine Learning (ML). These technologies represent a new era of data-driven intelligence, which is steadily gaining increasing influence in other fields, but as yet has had little impact in architecture. At the core of this new technological shift, data will be collected, processed, shared, and used as a decision-making tool to resolve a multitude of social, economic, and environmental issues. In the near future, the dynamic and adaptable changes occurring in the built environment which are influenced by climatic and environmental phenomena will be leveraged and used. This includes the effects of occupancy behavior, the building’s structural behavior, fabrication and material characteristics, in combination with the effective harvesting, harnessing, processing and use of large amounts of data. This process will in turn offer new opportunities in design decision-making, as well as in the implementation of new ideas for achieving the best performance, but also for considering contradictory objective criteria. In view of this paradigm shift, the conference attempts to provide the ground for presenting and discussing possibilities offered by data-driven intelligence across a range of thematic areas. These diverse themes might in turn influence and provide the ground for reconsidering architectural knowledge and practice in the future. Characteristic examples might include the recording of environmental and behavioral conditions in the built environment. For example, the recording of lighting and temperature through the Internet of Things (IoT), as well as examining their integration with AI, and therefore allowing for greater customization of spaces by the users. Moreover, cases where future advancements in computer capacity, combined with AI and ML, will offer the prospect of more powerful immersive environments coming to the fore. In addition, the conference aims to showcase examples where Virtual and Augmented Reality (VR and AR) experiences can be leveraged by datasets in the form of point clouds. This could, for instance, be through 3D Scanning, allowing for greater interaction between the physical and digital worlds, and simultaneously, through the introduction of concepts such as Digital Twins (DT) in various aspects of architectural design and construction. Furthermore, the conference attempts to discuss cases where a large number of fabrication datasets and workflows might be evolved, in combination with the plethora of digital tools currently available. The aim here would be to present how the collection and processing of constantly added data might extend fabrication intelligence, providing a number of advantages, as well as new challenges. More specifically, the conference aims to demonstrate cases where numerical control mechanisms, including robotic technologies applied in several fabrication tasks, such as Additive Manufacturing (AM) and 3D Printing, might be more adaptive in structural and material behavior conditions. This adaptability allows for superior fabrication intelligence to emerge. In parallel, the conference attempts to critically reflect upon, discuss and question the future of applying data-driven intelligence in architectural knowledge and practice. What are the risks posed by the use of data-driven intelligence in architecture? In this new era, what will the role of architects be? Does this mark the beginning of a reconsideration of the way architects participate in the creation of knowledge and practice, or will it bring about their marginalization? What will the social, economic, and environmental impact of data-driven intelligence be? The conference endeavors to address the theme of data-driven intelligence in architectural knowledge and practice spherically. It also looks to explore the advantages and disadvantages that this can bring to the discipline, but also the possibilities that it might offer, with particular emphasis on computational design and fabrication. In view of this perspective, the conference includes, but is not limited to, the topics of Digital Fabrication, Automated Fabrication, Construction, Materials and Form, Structures, Artificial Intelligence in Design, Data in Design, Building Information Modelling, Smart Cities, Virtual Reality and Augmented Reality in Architecture, Information Technology in Heritage, Design Tools and Development, Collaborative Design, Experimentation and Education. We hope that you will enjoy this book and the conference, and you will gain further insight in the research conducted within the topics handled towards a data-driven intelligence in architecture and the design of a sustainable future of the built environment. |
series |
eCAADe |
email |
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full text |
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last changed |
2024/11/17 22:05 |
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