FLUX:
Architecture in a Parametric Landscape by CCA Architecture/MEDIAlab is an
exhibition that focuses on the emerging field of advanced digital design.
In the last
two decades of architectural practice, new digital technologies have evolved
from being simply representational tools invested in the depiction of existing
models of architectural space to becoming significant performative machines
that have transformed the ways in which we both conceive and configure space
and material. These tools for design, simulation, and fabrication, have enabled
the emergence of new digital diagrams and parametric landscapes—often emulating
genetic and iterative dynamic evolutionary processes—that are not only
radically changing the ways in which we integrate disparate types of
information into the design process, but are also significantly altering the
methodological strategies that we use for design, fabrication and construction.
After the early digital explosion of the 1990’s, new forms of rigor and
production have entered into the field of architecture, supporting the
emergence of parametric and building information modeling and the enhanced use
of computational geometry and scripting that together represent the second
critical wave of digital design practices. That our current models of space are
far more continuous, variant and complex, is specifically a result of the tools
we are using to produce them, an inevitable byproduct of the ever-expanding
capacities of digital computation and related fabrication technologies as these
intersect with theoretical trajectories that long ago dismantled the social,
functional and technological truths of the early part of this century.
The FLUX
exhibition was generated in conjunction with this year’s CCA Architecture
Lecture Series focused on the integration of digital practices and design, CCA
MEDIAlab’s digital workshops and the International Smart Geometry conference
held in San Francisco in the spring of 2009. The content of the exhibition is
organized through a series of thematic categories each of which explores a set
of spatial logics that have been transformed through advanced digital
practices: Stacked Aggregates, Modular Assemblages, Pixelated Fields, Cellular
Clusters, Serial Iterations, Woven Meshes, Material Systems, and Emergent
Environments. In this exhibit, these themes are elaborated through the
presentation of 50 built works and experimental architectural projects, and are
expanded by analytical diagrams and 3D printed models generated by CCA
architecture students.
The FLUX
installation, developed by a team of CCA faculty and students, also explores
the possibilities of parametric modeling and digital fabrication through the
production of the exhibition armature. Produced using CCA’s new CNC router and
advanced parametric modeling techniques, the undulating structure expands and
contracts as its volume extends down the center of the long nave space. Through
the use of parametric modeling and a series of custom designed scripts, the
installation design can be quickly updated to address new design criteria. From
the thickness of the ribs to the overall twisting geometry and perforated
skins, the spatial form of the armature is controlled through a complex set of
relationships defined by its formal, performative, and fabrication constraints.
FLUX: Architecture in a Parametric Landscape
Exhibition
Project: FLUX Exhibition
Date: Fall 2008 – Spring 2009
Credit: CCA Architecture/MEDIAlab (see below for full
credits)
Course: Generative Design, FLUX Advanced Studio, FLUX
Fabrication Studio, Material Practice
Site: The Nave, California College of the Arts
Official Credits
Location: San Francisco, United States
Date:
2008 – 2009
The FLUX installation, developed over 6 months by a
team of CCA faculty and students, explores the possibilities of parametric
modeling and digital fabrication at CCA. Produced using CCA’s brand new CNC
router and advanced parametric modeling techniques, the structure undulates in
plan and section producing a sense of expansion and contraction in the long
Nave space. Through the use of parametric modeling and a series of custom
designed scripts, the installation design can be quickly updated to address new
design criteria. From the thickness of the ribs to the overall twisting
geometry and perforated skins, the geometry is controlled through a complex set
of relationships between its formal, performative, and fabrication constraints.
Director of Architecture: Ila Berman
Project Coordinator and Director of the MEDIAlab: Andrew Kudless
Installation Design: Kory Bieg, Andre Caradec, Andrew Kudless, Ila Berman
Exhibition Curation: Andrew Kudless with Ila Berman and Marc Fornes
Graphic Design Assistants: Jessica Gibson, Andy Payne, Melissa Spooner
Parametric Design Consultant: Andy Payne
Installation Team: Laurice der Bedrossian, Yoon Choi, Stephanie Close, Loi Dinh, David
Garcia, Jessica Gibson, John Hobart-Culleton, Charlotte Hofstetter, Madaline
Honig, Wayne Lin, Sandra Lopez, Mariko Low, Jen Melendez, Michelle Mucker,
Andrew Peters, Jason Rhein, Ocean Rogoff, Angela Todorova, Dianne de la Torre,
Michael Victoria, Olesya Yefimov
Graphic Design, Modeling and Scripting Team: Olutobi Adamolekun, Lynn Bayer, Ripon DeLeon,
Anthony Diaz, Alexa Getting, Jessica Gibson, Noah Greer, Benjamin Harth,
Madeline Honig, Elizabeth Jackson, Pouya Khakpour, Anna Leach, Ryan Lee,
Charles Ma, David Manzanares Garcia, Ariane Mates, Andy Payne, Harsha
Pelimuhandiram, Michael Perkins, Javier Rodriguez, Ricardo Ruiz, Melissa
Spooner, Jessica Stuenkel, Vladimir Vlad, Duncan Young
Sponsors: SolidThinking, K Bieg Design, SUM Arch, Vogue Graphics
CNC Fabrication Support: Ryan Buyssens, Jo Slota
Consultation: Chris Chalmers, Andrew Sparks
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