Monday, 27 June 2016

EXP 3:Final Submission

EXP 3: BRIDGING 


Mash-up of news articles:
Computational Architecture
These days, nearly every architect uses a computer. Whether it’s for 3D modeling, documentation or even creating a program spreadsheet, computers are well entrenched within the profession. Architects now need to know almost as much about software as they do about structures, building codes, and design.The use of computational processes in architecture is a widespread practice which draws on a set of theories of computer science developed in the 60s and 70s.
What exactly is computation design? Computational design is the application of computational strategies to the design process. While designers traditionally rely on intuition and experience to solve design problems, computational design aims to enhance that process by encoding design decisions using a computer language. The goal isn’t to document the final result necessarily, but rather the steps required to create that result.
Computer architectures aren’t laws of physics. They’re man-made inventions designed to harness raw resources, such as billions of transistors, for a range of useful computational tasks.When our computing needs and tasks change—as they inevitably will over the decades—it becomes increasingly awkward to express programs through the original architecture.

The architecture evolved slightly over time but remained fundamentally the same.
The vast majority of computing devices today are connected to the Internet, making them vulnerable to remote attack. Our data centers demand the type of strong security—including isolation and tracking of data—that classic architectures were never designed to support
By using a computational design process, you are encoding the design. Each step requires specific parameters. By thinking through through all the steps of the design problem and considers all the inputs and outputs, you effectively create a process that can be understood and repeated.

Reference
1. http://www.archdaily.com/785602/5-ways-computational-design-will-change-the-way-you-work
2. https://www.technologyreview.com/s/536841/better-architecture/

3. http://jac.sagepub.com/content/12/1/1.abstract 


18 sketches


36 Textures






























Pictures


 Meeting room for staff


 Research space for academic staff


 Gallery





 Studio


 Computer lab


 Office for academic staff and next to it is the office for general staff


 Library






Lecture Theatre


Texture used on the steps of the lecture hall





Workshop




Meeting place for students

texture used in the meeting areas.
texture used on the wall near the stairway.

Real Time Image







 The moving element helps in transportation. It takes people go directly to the library/computer lab. It doesn’t disturb the privacy of other spaces. It lets those people who are not a part of the school access to the library. The theory is allocation of spaces for convenience.
The moving element is mostly for the staff. It lets them transport from the common area to the meeting room for staff members. It saves time and effort. It goes with the theory of allocation of spaces for convince. It slides through the roof.


The SketchUp model


Lumion Model
https://www.dropbox.com/s/8x6iqsnw0l8dvfb/final%20exp%203%20design.ls6?dl=0




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