Conference Workshop 9: Textile architecture (in)formed by wind - Design processes and tools
Övrigt konferensbidrag, 2018
This research workshop at the AAG - Advances in Architectural Geometry 2018 Conference explored the design processes and tools related to textile architecture formed by wind. On one hand, we focused on how the internal structure of textiles affects their behaviour and geometric expression when in movement. On the other, we experimented with diverse tools useful for designing such textile architecture in movement, ranging from digital simulations of aesthetic expressions and behaviours, through structural property assessment, up to physical models set in motion by moving air.
The workshop used a combination of computational tools, embracing C++ code, Processing code, and the physics simulation engine Flexhopper within a visual programming environment Grasshopper, to investigate fabric geometry and behaviours at scales from the knitting and weaving of individual yarns to large-scale fabric structures. At the small scale, we were focusing on topology and graph theory. At the large scale, the interaction of fabric and wind was of prime interest. The emphasis was on geometry, physics and artistic expression of textile in motion. Participants were given a simple source code which could be modified, even by those with little experience of programming. Throughout the workshop, the participants received a basic introduction in different textile morphologies, from the structure and geometries of the treads in the woven and knitted textile to the shapes and application in a building scale. They also had the possibility to explore different behaviours of a special smart textile material whose structure could be altered using heat. The relationship between the two scales of textile design was explored both physically and digitally. How does the geometry of the threads affect the overall shape? Participants worked with both computer models as well as physical models, to gain an understanding for the geometry of the textile material, learn about different ways and means of simulating textile behaviour in movement, and get a comparison of the challenges brought in by each type of simulation. A large number of small-scale and large-scale models were produced during the workshop and showcased during the conference exhibition.
Workshop participants (alphabetical order)
David Andreen (Lund University, Sweden), Matt Ault (Manchester School of Architecture, UK), Mathias Bernhard (ETH Zurich, Switzerland), Greg Constantinos, Nikoletta Karastathi (University College London, London, UK), Joanna Lesna (Royal Danish Academy of Fine Arts, Denmark), Oldouz Moslemian (Aalto University, Finland), Hiroyuki Tachikawa (Keio University, Tokyo, Japan).
Architectural textiles
Kinetic architecture
Digital design
Computational architectural design
Computational wind simulation
Architectural expression and esthetics
Architecture and wind
Digital tooling
Författare
Delia Dumitrescu
Högskolan i Borås
Benjamin Felbrich
Universität Stuttgart
Erica Hörteborn
Forskning - Arkitekturens teori och metod
Christopher John Kenneth Williams
Forskning - Arkitekturens teori och metod
Malgorzata Zboinska
Forskning - Arkitekturens teori och metod
Gothenburg, Sweden,
Ämneskategorier
Arkitekturteknik
Design
Arkitektur