Architecture and its processes has developed substantially
through the integration of technology and its continual progressive nature over
time. Expanding on this progression; Information Master Builders (Kolarevic,
B), Design Worlds and Fabrication Machines (Mitchell, W) and Transgression from
drawing to making (Sheil,B), delve into the nature of the progression from
Analogue to Digital, revolutionizing the processes of designing to the physical
making in a range of industries, including architecture.
New technologies have played a major input into the creation
of a plethora of conceptual shapes in architecture; shapes that are only
possible with the use of data and computers, shapes beyond the human capacity
to calculate. Computers have furthered possibilities and increased the
efficiency and accuracy of the design process. Prior to the renaissance, the
architect is the “master builder” controlling both the design and construction
processes of a building. Soon after the Renaissance, architects disassociated
themselves with the “building” phase of the process and focused solely on the
“design”. In the architects eyes, technological advances in CAD and data
management increase efficiency, and allows the architect to envelope a range of
work covered by other disciplines. For example, the introduction and the
combination of CAD (Computer Aided Design) and CAM (Computer Aided
Manufacturing) has allowed architects to not only “design” their product but
also “produce” or “make” a physical model, thus, reconnecting an architects
role to a “master builder” and bridging the ever so distant gap between
designing and making.
The continual progression of technology over the past
decades have also seen the introduction to the development of new materials and
its limitations with its application into the architectural and construction
industry. Materials are continually developed, improved or even simply replaced
in a building depending on the nature of use, ultimately creating buildings
enhanced according to their environment.
With the move from Analogue to digital, the introduction of
technological advancements in the 20th century and the bridging
between designing and making, it is evident that architectural processes have
since been improved and enhanced with efficiency.
Readings:
Kolarevic, B. (2003). Information Master Builders.
Architecture in the digital age: design and manufacturing. B. Kolarevic. New
York, NY, Spon Press: 55-62
Mitchell, W. (2003). Design Worlds and Fabrication Machines.
Architecture in the digital age: design and manufacturing. B. Kolarevic. New
York, NY, Spon Press: 73-80.
Sheil, B. (2005). "Transgression from drawing to
making." Arq : Architectural Research Quarterly 9(1): 20-32.