Joshua Fowler here, and I would like to comment on a recent
book I purchased at the Chicago Architecture Foundation in Chicago. The book
is Bracket- Goes Soft- Almanac 2, edited
by Neeraj Bhatia, and Lola Sheppard.
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"Bracket is an almanac that highlights emerging
critical issues at the juncture of architecture, environment, and digital
culture. The series looks at thematics in our age of globalization that are
shaping the built environment in unexpected yet radically significant
ways," according to the editors. They also had this to comment about this
particular almanac, Goes Soft:
"[Soft]
refers to responsive, indeterminate, flexible, and immaterial systems that
operate through feedback, organization and resilience. These complex systems
transform through time to acknowledge shifting and indeterminate situations-
characteristics that are evident both in the dynamics of contemporary society
and the natural environment."
The reason for bringing up such material is that it pertains
directly to my interests as well as my thesis. My thesis revolves around
algorithmic generative design as a system for optimization within the realm of
architecture. This book is an excellent precursor and research reference for
such a dialogue. The book begins to describe the relationship between [soft]
systems and the context in which they are implemented. Ranging from
social-political change projects to physically adapting projects, [soft]
projects begin to optimize and respond to parameters within their context. This
book is helping me in narrowing my focus of my thesis and what I really want to
do. Creating adaptable and responsive architectural systems that physically
evolve with their environment from an algorithmic and computational stand
point. This kind of system has a great application in the present
"sustainability" issues of today, optimizing various systems in order
to create even smarter buildings using less energy. This concept does initially
seem a bit counter-intuitive at first, with systems usually relying on some
source of energy in order to function, however this concept of energy is
currently being challenged in innovative and progressive methods. I recall such
and example of this in a project, which I shall later post, about a column
structure whose only response was to the humidity in the air. This humidity
altered the physicality of the structure and the column responded. The idea
behind the project being that the more people there was in the given space to
which the column was, the less intrusive the column became due to the material
response of the column to the amount of humidity in the air. So this idea of
responsive systems should not carry with it the notion of traditional energy
application such as electricity or other finite resources, but should rather
carry the notion that we should be creating responsive systems which respond to
non-finite resources.
bracket's website is as follows: http://brkt.org
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