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2005-02-24 03:32 PM
2005-02-24 07:57 PM
2005-02-25 04:04 PM
2005-02-25 04:24 PM
2005-02-25 05:32 PM
2005-02-25 05:41 PM
Peter wrote:Cad, refrigerators, automobiles, toilets, television, cellular phones, you name it.
I've been worrying about whether I am becoming a slave
to my cad program
2005-02-25 06:10 PM
2005-02-25 06:22 PM
Vitruvius wrote:Truer words have never been spoken
The narrative is the building. And the technical process is really only the anecdote to that narrative.
2005-02-25 09:27 PM
Macbook Pro M1 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
another Moderator
2005-02-26 11:49 AM
ejrolon wrote:No doubt. We will be/are Super master masons. Maybe Hypermasons?
1) There is a difference between doing regular flat dwg's and the old mason built model and in using a VB is that you can integrate the best things of the two previous methods. For example pre-building the model gives us all the info as to the 3d relationship of the architectural solution. Having the immediate feedback of the 2d abstraction of the models gives us the ability to evaluate the design solution as it pertains to it's proportions, site limits, code regulations, etc.
ejrolon wrote:More. In a not so distant future (10 years, 20 years?) we will cease to have 2d representation, as we know it. The VB information will transit from our computer to the builders computer, to the building machines and the "intelligent" construction elements. This already happens, at an early stage, with Frank Gehry´s work. This means, technical 2d drawings (either paper or digital) will become irrelevant.
2) Using a VB as a basis for an architectural solution also implies possible changes to the way construction documents are developed. There is no economic or time limitation for not including 3d views/details of the project within the CD's.
ejrolon wrote:This is where I want to get a step ahead (maybe a big step).
3) The VB gives also the benefit of how the client understands the solution. At this point for certain projects I prepare multiple animations, still images and slide shows for the client, create a DVD and give it to the client to browse at it's leisure. Since I already have a established procedure for this changes do not slow down the project.
ejrolon wrote:As I also teach at an architecture university, this questions are foremost in my mind: Are we preparing this soon to be architects to deal with the present, or with (their) future? What will their future be like? How will they do architecture?
4) Since I teach at an Arch School I have had to re-evaluate the curriculum taking in consideration the VB approach (though the 1st and 2nd year students use SketchUp and the upper classmen I am moving to AC). The way I explain what I am trying to do in the faculty meetings is that the changes in software can give us the option to reevaluate the design process and the presentation of the final design solution. In this scenario the regular floorplans, elevs, etc. are a result of the 3D solution from which we then reevaluate the 3d design solution.
ejrolon wrote:Yes, that is it. And the next question is, of course, what kind of architecture will be done this way? More of the same, only better, or something fundamentally different, as it started 600 years ago, when architects left the building site and developed ideas sitting (or standing) at a table?
With the VB concept we can clarify that the solution to an architectural problem does not have to be established by doing 2d abstractions of it but by developing the complete solution using the 3D and 2D tools at our disposal. IMO what should be meant by saying "the end of drawing" is in reality the end (evolution?) of traditional drawing and design procedures, be it by hand or by using flatland software, and the beginning of intelligent digital drawing and the changes in architectural practice that it will entail.
Hope this helps