by
Sam Lubell
Tackling their own designs
While renderers and animators proliferate, other architects
design entirely computerized constructions of their own that
stretch the architectural imagination and even inspire (gasp!)
real structures. I think students coming out of school
realize not everything we do has to be [in] physical [space],
says Peter Anders, one of the organizers of the 2001 Association
of Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) design competition,
which Ahlquist entered with his design partner, Ryan Spruston.
 |
 |
 |
| “Vision 21” power
plants, 2000 (top and bottom); Desert H2Ouse, 2000
(left) Digital design firm KDLAB got free reign
to imagine what clean-energy-producing substations
would look like in the year 2020. Their photorealistic
film featuring a virtual residence in the desert
has been shown on the animation-festival circuit
for the past two years. |
|
The ACADIA competition challenged contestants to build a
virtual civic gathering space in Berlin called Inforum.
Ideas were posted and judged on the Web. Ahlquist and Sprustons
building, which Ahlquist describes as a wrapper that
captures exterior space and carries it inside, has winding,
unevenly shaped rooms and hallways that are intentionally
difficult to earmark for usage. This is a building thats
amorphous. Different uses can develop over time, Ahlquist
says. Thanks to the designers skillful use of lighting
and their attention to material detail, viewers are treated
to stunningly realistic perspectives of the virtual glass,
metal, and stone edifice, and the mesmerizing sky behind it.
|
Alquist designed his entry on his desktop PC using Autodesk
Viz 4 (a 3D modeling program that adds architectural tools
to traditional 3D graphics programs, like 3D Studio Max),
and RHINO, a form-modeling program used frequently by mechanical
engineers, which tackles engineering and fabrication. The
folds in the buildings glass and metal, Ahlquist explains,
could not be rendered in 2D drawings or CAD files. Theres
no way I could sketch this out for the client, let alone me,
to understand, he says.
Sean McCormack and Andrew Karlson, young architects from
Environs Development and Earth Tech, in Chicago, designed
their expansive model for the 2001 ACADIA competition by converting
the sound waves of a squealing modem connecting to the Internet
into CAD files. The result is a rounded, multilayered, glass-and-steel
superstructure.
Some architects have even started their own firms that take
on technology-focused projects that would be unusual for a
traditional practice to handle. Dean Di Simone and Joseph
Kosinski, who met while earning masters degrees in architecture
at Columbia University, are founding partners of KDLAB, a
New York digital design studio. In a typical architectural
practice, you have to put in a handful of years under a licensed
architect and end up spending 10 percent of your time designing.
In our practice, were able to spend a much larger portion
of our time designing rather than administering our projects,
says Di Simone.
|