Posts Tagged ‘space’

Digital Fabrication

Saturday, February 6th, 2010

Early this year, I got chance to visit The University of Michigan Taubman College of Architecture and Urban Planning. And I was luckily able to check out its impressive fabrication lab. It was inspiring talking with prof. Karl Daubmann, prof. Glenn Wilcox and director of the FAB lab Wesley McGee. I appreciated it a lot that they showed me some of their creative works.

The short visit also gave me quite a lot to think about. Certainly, there is much potential for applying digital fabrication in architecture design and production processes. Digital fabrication is the process of translating a digital design into a physical object. Its techniques such as rapid prototyping, stereolithography and laser cutting enable the production of physical objects directly from digital models. It allows creating new forms or structures, and exploration of the aesthetics of space.

But I am thinking about the possibility of mapping invisible data, not just concrete/hard data such as body movement, breath, and temperature but also some more abstract/soft information - for instance, memory, emotions, cognitive processes, thoughts, etc. into the architectural space generated by digital fabrication technology. And when these data could be embedded into our living space, in turn they would affect the way we interact with the environment.

Apart from this, I am always fascinated by how basic geometries with simple algorithms can be aggregated and emerge into extensively complicated forms. I’d like to see more creative or experimental digital fabricated works.

fablab

Urbanstract

Monday, December 7th, 2009

A nice video created by art Director Jopsu Ramu from Musuta Ltd. and Shun Kawakami takes you across an abstract urban space in 45 Seconds. For more information of Urbanstract

Architectural inspiration

Saturday, July 11th, 2009

An inspiring talk from one of my favorite architects, Daniel Libeskind. I’m increasingly aware of the way thinking can change design radically - even the intellectual thinking process can be a paradox. I really enjoyed his points on the emotional dimension as well as complexity vs. simplicity, etc. This conceptual, soft and humanistic thinking rather than thinking of architecture as a hard and concrete object greatly interests me.

If we could explore the world with such an associative thinking approach, thinking about things in a more organic way, we could get much inspiration and design a better living environment…