computation girl

3/02/2010

cover_mag_low.jpg

Our beloved sister Magdalena Pantazi is featured in a recent publication entitled “Computational Constructs”, edited by Daxia Li,Shouheng Chen, Shuyi Li and Josh Lobel. This book is the product of a collaboration between the MIT Computation Group (MIT Department of Architecture) and the World Association of Chinese Architects (WACA).  Here goes the paper’s abstract–>

Design Grammars: From Implicit to Explicit Rules
Magdalini-Eleni Pantazi

Abstract
Since the first application of computer programs to problem solving in the 1960s, computers and computational processes have been gradually introduced in the field of architecture to the point where today they are an inherent part of architectural practice and education. This extensive use of computers in architecture, however, occurs late in the design phase, at the stage of production of construction documents or representation of the final product, and so rarely are computers used to address the early design phase, that of creativity. A significant reason for this is that computational processes, based on algorithms, use explicit rules and unambiguous procedures, while the processes that architects employ at the early design phase are implicit and obscure. Whether a process is implicit or explicit, though, it is still underlined by a framework of interacting rules. Can rules, therefore, provide a bridge between explicit and implicit processes? The present paper addresses this question through a design experiment with a group of professional architects. The experiment was in design composition from scratch and the scope was to identify the role of rules in the architects’ design processes. In this framework a shape grammar formalism was developed to describe both the design activities and the end products. Architects were found to work towards a design solution by developing general rule schemas that gradually take the form of specific and explicit rules.

No comments yet.

Write a comment: