Intelligent control : disruptive technologies /
Intelligent control : disruptive technologies /
edited by Rob Hyde, Filippos Filippidis.
- 141 pages, 25 cm. illustrations
- Design studio ; 2021, volume 2 .
Includes bibliographical references and index.
How should we train? What should we learn? What is our value? Disruptive technologies have increased speculation about what it means to be an architect. Innovations simultaneously offer great promise and potential risk to design practice. This volume identifies the game-changing trends driven by technology, and the opportunities they provide for architecture, urbanism and design. It advocates for an approach of intelligent control that transforms practice with specialist knowledge of technological models and systems. It features new developments in automation, generative design, augmented reality, videogame urbanism, artificial intelligence and robotics, as well as lived experiences within a continually shifting landscape. Showcasing evolving research, it discusses the cultural, social, environmental and political implications of various technological trajectories. In doing so it speculates upon future urban, spatial, aesthetic and formal possibilities within architecture. The future is already here. Now is the time to act. Features: Austrian Institute of Technology AiT - City Intelligence Lab CiT, Bryden Wood, Mollie Claypool, Soomeen Hahm, Hawkins\Brown, LASSA Architects, The Living, Danil Nagy, Odico Construction Robotics, Stefana Parascho, Luke Caspar Pearson, SHoP Architects, Kostas Terzidis, Mette Ramsgaard Thomsen and Sandra Youkhana.
Rob Hyde is an architect and academic at the Manchester School of Architecture, leading the Masters Professional Studies Unit. He co-founded the Complexity Planning & Urbanism (CPU) MArch Design Studio Atelier and co-founded/co-directs the associated CPU Research Lab. Professionally active locally, nationally and internationally, he is a member of the RIBA North West Practice and Education Committees Filippos Filippidis is an architect and computational design specialist at Complexity Planning & Urbanism (CPU) research laboratory for Manchester School of Architecture. He has extensive experience working across all scales after working in practices such as ecologicStudio, Robofold, Acconci Studio, Foster + Partners Bryden Wood. He has also taught design studios and workshops at Brighton University and AA Visiting School Melbourne.
9781003212751 1003212751 9781000450934 1000450937 9781000450897 1000450899
10.4324/9781003212751 doi
9781003212751 Taylor & Francis
2021762406
GBC1B5741 bnb
020266607 Uk
Technological innovations--Economic aspects.
Architecture and technology.
Disruptive technologies.
Intelligent control systems.
Innovations--Aspect économique.
Technologie de rupture.
ARCHITECTURE--General.
ARCHITECTURE--Methods & Materials.
Intelligent control systems.
Architecture and technology.
Disruptive technologies.
Technological innovations--Economic aspects.
NA2543.T43
720.105 I61 2021
Includes bibliographical references and index.
How should we train? What should we learn? What is our value? Disruptive technologies have increased speculation about what it means to be an architect. Innovations simultaneously offer great promise and potential risk to design practice. This volume identifies the game-changing trends driven by technology, and the opportunities they provide for architecture, urbanism and design. It advocates for an approach of intelligent control that transforms practice with specialist knowledge of technological models and systems. It features new developments in automation, generative design, augmented reality, videogame urbanism, artificial intelligence and robotics, as well as lived experiences within a continually shifting landscape. Showcasing evolving research, it discusses the cultural, social, environmental and political implications of various technological trajectories. In doing so it speculates upon future urban, spatial, aesthetic and formal possibilities within architecture. The future is already here. Now is the time to act. Features: Austrian Institute of Technology AiT - City Intelligence Lab CiT, Bryden Wood, Mollie Claypool, Soomeen Hahm, Hawkins\Brown, LASSA Architects, The Living, Danil Nagy, Odico Construction Robotics, Stefana Parascho, Luke Caspar Pearson, SHoP Architects, Kostas Terzidis, Mette Ramsgaard Thomsen and Sandra Youkhana.
Rob Hyde is an architect and academic at the Manchester School of Architecture, leading the Masters Professional Studies Unit. He co-founded the Complexity Planning & Urbanism (CPU) MArch Design Studio Atelier and co-founded/co-directs the associated CPU Research Lab. Professionally active locally, nationally and internationally, he is a member of the RIBA North West Practice and Education Committees Filippos Filippidis is an architect and computational design specialist at Complexity Planning & Urbanism (CPU) research laboratory for Manchester School of Architecture. He has extensive experience working across all scales after working in practices such as ecologicStudio, Robofold, Acconci Studio, Foster + Partners Bryden Wood. He has also taught design studios and workshops at Brighton University and AA Visiting School Melbourne.
9781003212751 1003212751 9781000450934 1000450937 9781000450897 1000450899
10.4324/9781003212751 doi
9781003212751 Taylor & Francis
2021762406
GBC1B5741 bnb
020266607 Uk
Technological innovations--Economic aspects.
Architecture and technology.
Disruptive technologies.
Intelligent control systems.
Innovations--Aspect économique.
Technologie de rupture.
ARCHITECTURE--General.
ARCHITECTURE--Methods & Materials.
Intelligent control systems.
Architecture and technology.
Disruptive technologies.
Technological innovations--Economic aspects.
NA2543.T43
720.105 I61 2021
