by
Sam Lubell
With
renderings, architects can direct the show
Many
software-savvy architects help other designers present their
work digitally in renderings and animations. For the past
several years, well-heeled firms have commissioned 3D animators
to design virtual walk-throughs and videos of their projects
for promotion, presentation, and other purposes. New York
City visualization firm IOMedia has created intricate movie
presentations for Polshek Partnerships Clinton Library
in Arkansas and Gehry Partners Guggenheim Las Vegas
Art of the Motorcycle exhibition to help raise funds and generate
publicity for these works. The Boston firm Neoscape helped
the New York 2012 Committee give colorful, 3D previews of
its event sites to the United States and International Olympic
committees. Many architects, like Friedrich St. Florien, who
commissioned Providence, R.I., firm Advanced Media Design
to create digital renderings of his World War II Memorial
in Washington, D.C., appreciate the ability of computer models
to give clear visual indications of how projects are advancing.
Digital
renderers trained in architecture recognize their work is
often limited by the visions of the architects they work with.
Yet many of them say they dont miss the tedium and constraints
of their old profession. I found out architecture was
all about wall sections and roof details, not schematic designs,
says Adam Kruvand of Studio 2A, a digital design firm based
in Kansas City and New York, which recently completed 3D renderings
for the new Soldiers Field in Chicago. Kruvand had worked
previously for Hellmuth, Obata + Kassabaums HOK Sport.
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Entry
for ACADIA design competition, 2001
As an example of how technology shapes form, designers
Sean McCormack and Andrew Karlson looked at the
wave pattern generated by that most annoying of
digital-age soundsthe screech of a modem as
it connects to the Internetand transformed
it into a virtual structure of glass and steel.
Its zigzaggy shape conveys a zealous (if off-kilter)
energy, much like the noise that inspired it. |
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His creative
outlets, he says, include collaborating with firms to put
together the 3D conception of a project: choosing colors,
lighting, textures, and camera views for renderings. I
gravitated to 3D stuff because thats where I could actually
use my art and design skills to affect the way things looked,
he says.
Peter
Korian, president of IOMedia, sees the digital renderer as
an extension of a firms skills and a vital way to promote
projects. Every architecture firm should have 30 additional
people who do what we do, he says. Calling his contemporaries
technologists instead of architects, he says that
using 3D technology to make creative, emotional presentations
of a project is every bit as creativeand satisfyingas
designing a building in bricks and mortar. If Frank
Lloyd Wright or Le Corbusier were around today, theyd
be doing what were doing, he says.
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