architectural design...architectural design architectural design september/october 2014 issn...

15

Upload: others

Post on 12-Aug-2020

14 views

Category:

Documents


6 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND
Page 2: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND
Page 3: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014ISSN 0003-8504

PROFILE NO 231ISBN 978-1118-613481

GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND IZAKI

05 / 2014

EMPATHIC SPACETHE COMPUTATION OF HUMAN-CENTRIC ARCHITECTURE

Page 4: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

All Rights Reserved. No part of this

publication may be reproduced, stored

in a retrieval system or transmitted in

any form or by any means, electronic,

mechanical, photocopying, recording,

scanning or otherwise, except under the

terms of the Copyright, Designs and

Patents Act 1988 or under the terms

of a licence issued by the Copyright

Licensing Agency Ltd, 90 Tottenham

Court Road, London W1T 4LP, UK,

without the permission in writing of

the Publisher.

Subscribe to 1

3 is published bimonthly and is

available to purchase on both a

subscription basis and as individual

volumes at the following prices.

PricesIndividual copies: £24.99 / US$45

Individual issues on 3 App

for iPad: £9.99 / US$13.99

Mailing fees for print may apply

Annual Subscription RatesStudent: £75 / US$117 print only

Personal: £120 / US$189 print and

iPad access

Institutional: £212 / US$398 print

or online

Institutional: £244 / US$457

combined print and online

6-issue subscription on 3 App

for iPad: £44.99 / US$64.99

1ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014PROFILE NO 231

05 / 2014

Front and back cover: Gianni Colombo, Elastic Space, 1967–8. c/o Galleria L’Attico, Rome, 1968. Courtesy Archive Gianni Colombo, Milan

Inside front cover: ART+COM, River is…, Yeongsan River Pavilion, Gwangju, South Korea, 2012. © ART+COM

Editorial OfficesJohn Wiley & Sons

25 John Street

London WC1N 2BS

UK

T: +44 (0)20 8326 3800

EditorHelen Castle

Managing Editor (Freelance)Caroline Ellerby

Production Editor Elizabeth Gongde

PrepressArtmedia, London

Art Direction and DesignCHK Design:

Christian Küsters

Sophie Troppmair

Printed in Italy by Printer Trento Srl

Subscription Offices UKJohn Wiley & Sons Ltd

Journals Administration Department

1 Oldlands Way, Bognor Regis

West Sussex, PO22 9SA, UK

T: +44 (0)1243 843 272

F: +44 (0)1243 843 232

E: [email protected]

Print ISSN: 0003-8504

Online ISSN: 1554-2769

Prices are for six issues and include

postage and handling charges.

Individual-rate subscriptions must be

paid by personal cheque or credit card.

Individual-rate subscriptions may not

be resold or used as library copies.

All prices are subject to change

without notice.

Rights and PermissionsRequests to the Publisher should be

addressed to:

Permissions Department

John Wiley & Sons Ltd

The Atrium

Southern Gate

Chichester

West Sussex PO19 8SQ

UK

F: +44 (0)1243 770 620

E: [email protected]

2

Page 5: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

1ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN

GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND IZAKI

In memory of Paul Coates

EMPATHIC SPACE:THE COMPUTATION OF HUMAN-CENTRIC ARCHITECTURE

IN THIS ISSUE

EDITORIAL BOARDWill Alsop

Denise Bratton

Paul Brislin

Mark Burry

André Chaszar

Nigel Coates

Peter Cook

Teddy Cruz

Max Fordham

Massimiliano Fuksas

Edwin Heathcote

Michael Hensel

Anthony Hunt

Charles Jencks

Bob Maxwell

Brian McGrath

Jayne Merkel

Peter Murray

Mark Robbins

Deborah Saunt

Patrik Schumacher

Neil Spiller

Leon van Schaik

Michael Weinstock

Ken Yeang

Alejandro Zaera-Polo

5 EDITORIAL Helen Castle

6 ABOUT THE GUEST-EDITORS Christian Derix and Åsmund Izaki

8 SPOTLIGHT Visual highlights of the issue

14 INTRODUCTION Th e Space of People in Computation

Christian Derix

HEURISTIC GENERATION

24 Generative Design Methods and the

Exploration of Worlds of Formal Possibility Philip Steadman

32 Th e Deep Structure of the Picturesque

Paul Coates and Christian Derix

32

38 Crafting Space: Generative Processes

of Architectural Confi gurations Kazuhiro Kojima

46 Solutions You Cannot Draw Markus Braach

INTERACTIONS IN THE FIELD

54 Embracing the Creativity of

Stigmergy in Social Insects

Guy Th eraulaz

60 Block/Tower: A Vertical Landscape

in Midtown Manhattan

Stan Allen and Rafi Segal

66 Programs as Paradigms Pablo Miranda Carranza

3

Page 6: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

COGNITIVE CONDITIONS

74 Spatial Cognition and Architectural

Space: Research Perspectives

Daniel R Montello

80 Empathic Imagination: Formal

and Experiential Projection Juhani Pallasmaa

86 Th e Future is Curved Olafur Eliasson

94 Th e Aura of the Digital

Jussi Ängeslevä

EXPERIENTIAL TYPOLOGIES

100 Th e Generic City and its Origins

Bill Hillier

106 Polyvalence: Th e Competence

of Form and Space with Regard

to Diff erent Interpretations

Herman Hertzberger

114 Encoding User Experiences

Åsmund Izaki and Lucy Helme

FUTURE FORWARD

122 New Curricula: Syntonic Systems

Christian Derix and Åsmund Izaki

130 Near Futures: Associative Archetypes

Christian Derix and Prarthana Jagannath

136 COUNTERPOINT How Can Code be Used to Address

Spatiality in Architecture?

Leon van Schaik

142 CONTRIBUTORS

It is necessary to unlearn space in order to embody space.— Olafur Eliasson

4

Page 7: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

EDITORIAL Helen Castle

5

Since the evaporation of the Modernist project, space has been losing ground in architecture. Whereas ‘space’ as a term in the second half of the 20th century was constantly on the lips of every architect, echoing Le Corbusier, by the late 1990s and early 2000s it had receded. The onset of computer-aided generative design had led to new preoccupations with surface and parametricism. Space, though, did not wholly wane in the practice of architecture. It remained locked into the working methods and drafted plans of experienced architects, like Herman Hertzberger (pp 106–13), who projected spatial configurations that intuitively responded to users’ needs. This issue not only effectively reasserts the position of ‘space’ in architecture in a highly current computational context, but reframes its significance in the realisation of work that is ‘human-centric’, or ‘empathic’. In terms of architectural computation this publication builds on an existing lineage of work, which is fully described by Guest-Editor Christian Derix in his introduction (pp 14–23). It picks up the baton from 1960s computing pioneers, such as Paul Coates and John Frazer, who first experimented with self-organising systems and a theoretical framework for the autonomy of space, as well as the ground-breaking work undertaken by Bill Hillier in the 1970s, establishing ‘space syntax’ as a comprehensive method for exploring how people relate to space in the built environment. Understanding the potential for an emphasis on the user and the occupation of space for practice, Derix, as Director at WoodsBagot, and previously Director for Computational Design at Aedas|R&D (2004–2014), has assimilated his knowledge of the work of the likes of Paul Coates, who he taught with at the University of East London, in an approach that applied algorithms in the exploration of human behaviours, which could be fully utilised in the development of large-scale masterplanning, major urban schemes and infrastructure projects, as well as in individual buildings. Just as the Guest-Editors Christian Derix and Åsmund Izaki acknowledge their debt in this issue to an earlier generation of computational designers and thinkers, so do they recognise the work undertaken by others in the field of cognition, perception and phenomenology. This is most apparent in the inclusion of articles by the renowned architectural thinker and author Juhani Pallasmaa (pp 80–5) and artist Olafur Eliasson (pp 86–93). The compatibility between an ‘empathic’ approach and computation is not, however, quite a done deal. Could we be leaving too much to code? Could a focus on the computational aspect of mapping human behaviour lead to architects neglecting to develop their own spatial consciousness or intelligence? Controversially, Leon van Schaik, the author of the Counterpoint thinks so (pp 136– 41). 1

Text © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Image © Illustration by Frances Castle

5

Page 8: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

6

Aedas|R&D Computational Design Research (CDR), Circulation resilience analysis, 2010–13 top: Part of the EU research project, Resilient Infrastructure and Building Security, in collaboration with the Jill Dando Institute of Crime Sciences, University College London (UCL).

Aedas|R&D Computational Design Research (CDR), Visual performance of the September 11th Memorial Museum, New York, 2007bottom: Visualisation showing each location has a value of visual performance that approximates visitors’ legibility of the interior space. In collaboration with Davis Brody Bond Architects and Planners, New York.

Aedas|R&D Computational Design Research (CDR), Planning Narrative Visualisation, 2009–12 centre right: Time-based visualisation of online articles about the planning of the London 2012 Olympic stadium, in collaboration with Dr Albena Yaneva of the Manchester Architectural Research Centre (MARC).

Aedas|R&D Computational Design Research (CDR), Visual risk simulation, 2011centre left: CDR has developed multiple visibility simulations for building volumes, multi-floor interiors and urban spaces.

6

Page 9: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

7

ABOUT THE GUEST-EDITORSCHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND IZAKI

Text © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Images: p 6 © Aedas; p 7(t) © Christian Derix; p 7(b) © Ami Izaki

Christian Derix and Åsmund Izaki have developed a unique design strategy using computation as

a vehicle to embed human-centric concerns in spatial systems. With the Computational Design

Research (CDR) group of Aedas|R&D, founded by Derix in 2004, they have created design

simulations for many projects in different contexts, from large professional urban and architectural

projects, to speculative research in academic collaborations, Web-based visualisations and

furniture systems.

Their collaboration started in 2007 on the development of new spatial analysis simulations for the

National September 11th Memorial Museum project in New York. Here, it became evident that they

share a strong interest in spatial qualities and algorithmic design, focusing on the user as occupant

and designer to access phenomena of space through algorithmic processes. Both are architects, with

Derix providing expertise in algorithmic models of self-organisation and spatial cognition, while Izaki

has extensive experience in interactive systems of design. They have integrated their complementary

knowledge for projects based on simulating human perception and user interaction for the analysis and

generation of architectural space. This synergetic set of knowledge and skills has not only provided a

direction for CDR, but also a research focus – user-centric simulation – for the Aedas R&D initiative

as a whole.

They have published their approach and projects through more than 40 academic papers, book

chapters and guest lecturing, leading to a new view of architectural computing that has been adopted

by several architecture schools of universities including ETH Zurich and KTH Stockholm. The work

of CDR has received commendations for spatial simulation at awards such as the 2010 Presidents

Medal for Research in Practice of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), the 2011

Italian Compasso d’Oro for the online algorithmic design engine of the VITA Shelving System for

MDFItalia, and the 2012 Centre for Tall Buildings and Urban Habitats (CTBUH) Innovation award

for the computer-activated responsive facade of the Al Bahar towers. CDR is now advancing the field

of human-centric computational design for spatial strategies at global design and consulting firm

WoodsBagot, of which Derix is a director.

Christian Derix co-founded Aedas|R&D in London. He studied architecture and computation in

Milan and London, and has taught the subject at various European universities since 2001, including

the University of East London, University College London (UCL), Milan Polytechnic and the

Technical University of Vienna, and as a visiting professor at the Technical University of Munich. He

is currently an associate professor at IE University Madrid, and a visiting professor at the University

of Sheffield. In 2002 he founded the Centre for Evolutionary Computing in Architecture (CECA)

at the University of East London with the late Paul Coates, with whom he taught until 2009. Here

he introduced the use of self-organising neural networks to space planning and developed a series of

algorithmic models to investigate artificial cognition and spatial organisation, including models of

evolutionary computing for masterplanning with multi-criteria optimisation.

Åsmund Izaki is a senior designer at WoodsBagot. He previously worked as a senior designer and

researcher at the Aedas|R&D CDR, during which he developed computational models for urban

planning, architecture and furniture through code, in the form of interactive tools. Projects have

included an interactive interface for the VITA shelving system, and visibility analysis for the National

September 11th Memorial Museum to research modelling perceptual and experiential aspects

of architecture. He holds an MArch from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology

(NTNU), where he specialised in architecture and adaptive systems, before sharpening his expertise

with graduate studies in art and technology at Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg.

After finishing his studies he worked with the architecture group servo and the interaction design

office Kram/Weisshaar on projects that have been widely exhibited and published internationally.

He has led a number of courses on topics related to design and technology at Konstfack University

College of Arts, Crafts and Design and at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm. 1

7

Page 10: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

Block/Tower, 119 Third Avenue, Manhattan, New York, 2011Views of the south (left) and north (right) elevations showing the spatial arrangement of programmes.

Stan Allen and Rafi SegalSPOTLIGHT

8

Page 11: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

9

Page 12: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

Betweenness centrality of Apple Valley, Minnesota, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, 2014The width of the roads shows their betweenness centrality, a measure used in network analysis. It is calculated by counting the amount of shortest paths that pass through an edge or node, for all shortest paths from every node to all other nodes. Calculated using the Open Source Boost graph library.

Pablo Miranda Carranza

10

Page 13: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

Your rainbow panorama, ARoS Aarhus Art Museum, Aarhus, Denmark, 2011Situated on the roof of ARoS Aarhus Art Museum, Your rainbow panorama is a 150-metre (490-foot) long coloured glass circular walkway.

Olafur Eliasson

11

Page 14: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

12

Page 15: ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN...ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN ARCHITECTURAL DESIGN SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2014 ISSN 0003-8504 PROFILE NO 231 ISBN 978-1118-613481 GUEST-EDITED BY CHRISTIAN DERIX AND ÅSMUND

Artificial Curator, Centre for Evolutionary Computing in Architecture (CECA), University of East London, 2008A multi-stage synthetic machine learning model to generate intuitive exhibition layouts. The figure shows an image composition of various stages of associative networks interpreting exhibition features, schedules and layout modules, before the resulting plans.

John Harding

Text © 2014 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Images: pp 8-9 © Stan Allen and Rafi Segal; p 10 © Pablo MIranda Carranza; p 11 © 2006 Olafur Eliasson. Courtesy of ARoS Aarhus Kunstmuseum, Denmark pp 12-13 © John Harding

13