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Tired of today's freeform architecture? Still interested in technology?

A New Plateau

The next big thing is not parametrics. It's not a new geometry. It is more than that. The stances of Gehry, Eisenman, Libeskind, UNStudio, Hadid and others are pointing towards a new direction altogether. They give us a taste of what lies beyond, as do the aesthetic exercises of Herzog & de Meuron or Zumthor. We have left the certainties of geometry, logic and arithmetic behind. The substrate of the new meta-level is symbolic. At our Chair, we don't want to follow a reductionist, functional view of architecture. We don't like the uncommitted structuralist attitude towards global challenges. We want to start cultivating a new plateau; widen the perspective. We want to be pioneers in learning to construct within the symbolic, and do so seriously. The MAS class provides a forum, establishes a network and offers practical experiments, doing just that.

What's next ?
Today, information technology is ubiquitous. Most architects have a self-taught working knowledge of visualisation and computer-aided modelling techniques. In some places, there are specialised technical programmes, especially in the areas of parametric design and experimental computer-generated production. This specialist knowledge is not sufficient, however, to keep track of the medial, technical, organisational, economical and political developments in architecture. Information technology has become a driving force in every sphere of activity for architects. But these developments are as yet badly understood, and so their interpretation is narrow and the architectural landscape diffuse. This programme is directed at architects, designers and creative people. It offers, for the first time, not technical specialisation but architectural integration on a higher technical level. It conveys profound insights into a variety of technical areas and prompts theoretical reflection as well as promoting an independent personal stance. The programme is demanding. Technologies are becoming ever simpler and more accessible, but defining an individual position for an architect is becoming more and more difficult. We offer no formulas or solutions. We mistrust the attitude, taken by MIT for example, that popularises, and in doing so naturalises, technology. This, to our minds, amounts to a positioning for power by way of simplification: complexities are being externalised. We believe that this is not enough: technological creation has to be complemented by expertise, not just in technology, but also in creation. Step out of the wood

The MAS in Architecture and Information is a one-year full-time course at the Chair for CAAD at ETH Zrich. It starts at the beginning of the academic year in September and consists of 3 theory modules (M1, M4 and M7), and 4 practical modules (M2, M3, M5 and M6), in 3 different focal areas (research, development and application) and concludes after 12 months with an individual Masters project, in September the following year. The cost of the programme is CHF 12,000.

Brighton

ETH Zrich, MAS in Architecture and Information


September, 1 Week October, 4 Weeks November, 4 Weeks Dec - Januar, 4 Weeks Januar - Feb,

M0 welcome

M1 theory

M2 A research
p 13

M3 A research
Connected Artefacts p 13

M4 theory
Architecture and Information

Livint in a World of Theory and Information Algorithmic Design Abundant Potentiabilities p 13 p 13

M2 B development M3 B development
Fiction p 13 Innovation p 13

M2 C application
Advanced Geometry Modelling p 13

M3 C application
Mass Customised Production p 13

4 Weeks

March, 4 Weeks

April, 4 Weeks

Mai, 4 Weeks

June - Sept, 12 Weeks

M5 A research
Customised Materials p 13 p 13

M6 A research
Design Beyond the Problematic p 13

M7 theory
Information and I p 13

IT
Individual Thesis p 13

M5 B development M6 B development
Articulation p 13 Population p 13

M5 C application
Building Information Models p 13

M6 C application
Buidling Operation Models p 13

Charles Jencks on Postmodernism

Map about Architecture by C

Charles Jencks Map of the Internet

'' It is great to be a part of a true research! '' Miro Roman

...I'm talking to my parents, trying to explain them what I'm doing for this module. My mother says 'Why you are not learning Architecture?' My father, very satisfied replies 'They are learning to think'... Ekaterina Ageeva

"Looking deeper into theoretical issues, while shifting perspectives towards tools and methods.!Rethinking "computational" architecture!by focusing on underlying principles." Evangelos Pantazis

"Few higher-academic experiences allow for self-reflective and insightful paths in the field of technology, relying not on instrumentalism, but on conceptual and methodological strategy. My experience here has revealed a fresh and fertile perspective towards the future of architecture, accessible today." Mauricio Rodrguez

Rem Koolhaas OMA Casa da Musica, Porto, Portugal 2005

M0
module 0 welcome

Living in a World of Abundant Potentiabilities

M0
This programme is unlike any other. We take a different stance. Technology is not comfortable. We cant ask technology whats right and whats wrong, whats good or bad. These are our machines, weve made them. They are our statistics, our images, which weve created of our world. They are not The Truth about earth or nature. So who can we complain to, if not ourselves? Who should we be afraid of? Elsewhere, you may hear people declare: Nothing is scarier than the truth. (Al Gore). Globalisation, finance, climate, technological catastrophes, naturalisation, scarcities, wars, terrorism, fundamentalism, media overkill, educational crises... cool it! Our programme takes an optimistic perspective, from a new plateau: we have more energy than we need, we have fantastic potential. But we have to do it ourselves. We cant ask anybody else to do it for us. Not nature, not technology. Just ourselves. Worm up, lectures and seminar. 1 week in September. The Draughtsmans Contract, Peter Greenaway

Silk production in Bejing, China

Silk production in China

Cabinet of curiosities

M1
theory

Theory and Information

Tran

M1
Information is everywhere. The term information is so powerful, yet we understand it so little. Information is information. Its neither energy nor is it matter (as Norbert Wiener claims). But this doesnt say a lot, and perhaps it isnt even accurate, because matter is a form of energy. What, though, is information? Perhaps the question is put the wrong way. Couldnt we ask instead: how can we use information? Especially seeing that computers are not machines but general machines. And in asking the question how?, other, unexpected, questions pose themselves, such as: how do we use rationality? How analytics? How do we use geometry, arithmetic, algebra? How can we produce stabilities? How can we use symbols, indices, signals? How calculations, functions, codings? How generalisations and abstractions? How concepts, words, texts, constructs, drawings? How infrastructures, medialities, narratives? Fictions, phantasms, specifications, definitions? How form, structure, topoi? How behaviour, sensation, reason, cognition, logic? How does the new come about? What do Deleuze and Guattari, Derrida, Habermas, Heidegger, Sartre, Wittgenstein, Nietzsche, Peirce, Boole, Poe, Hegel, Kant, Leibniz, Spinoza, Descartes, Aristotle, Plato and all the others have to say about it? - Curious yet?...

Lectures, seminar and exercises in reading and writing. Final presentation as a short video. 4 Weeks in October.

nsplanting rice seedlings in Java, Indonesia

Libr

module 1 theory Theory and Information

rary of the Abbey of St Gall (St Gallen, Switzerland)

Georg Flegel, Still Li

ife with Apple, 1566 - 1638.

Van Gogh: Still Life with a Basket of Apples, 1885.

module 1 theory Theory and Information

Apples, 2011.

Kughelof-Specialite alsacienne parfumee au citron et a la fleur d'oranger

Daredevil Comic, 2005.

module 1 theory Theory and Information

Rice-field,Kakogawa,Japan, 2008.

module 1 theory Theory and Information

Dehli, India 2010

M2 A
module 2 A

by Algorithms, or The Availability of Logical Thinking

research Design

The Masjid-i Shah, Isfahan 1629

M2 A
In 1854 George Boole developed an algebra that reflects logical thought (An Investigation of the Laws of Thought). Computers follow this type of algebra and externalise precisely what we call logical thinking (Turing, 1936; von Neumann, 1945). We may call it Turing Computing. Using computers, we are able, as creative people, to explore this logical think space. We can discover phenomena never seen before. Multitudes of new images, geometries and artefacts become concrete constructions from a logical world. Its so simple: procedures, iterations, recursions, objects, rules, constraints, agents, text, drawing, imagery, video, morphing, topology, grammar, cellular automata, parametric geometry, simulation, generation, evolutionary algorithms, neural networks... all easily accessible and online. This module offers practical exercises in logical order systems and delivers an introduction to corresponding thought. Technologies: processing, Java, Eclipse. Lectures and exercises in programming. Final presentation as a short video. 4 weeks, November

Charles Babbage, Analytical Engine, 1823, 2000

module 2 A research Design by Algorisms

Culmann, Grafische Statik 1866. Lueger 1904

module 2 A research Design by Algorisms

Applied Fourier (1768 - 1830) Transformation

Applied Fourier (1768 - 1830) Transformation

module 2 A research Design by Algorisms

The first Intel processor, 4004, 1971.

module 2 A research Design by Algorisms

CAAD 2009

Michael Hansmeyer, CAAD 2009

CAAD 2009

M2 B
module 2 B development

Fiction

Gustave M

M2 B
It is always the great narratives, the big concepts that count. They are told, and retold, again and again. Over and over, they are reformulated, as poetry, as prose, as fiction, as definitions, as lists, as compositions, as tables, as forms, as users guides, as formulas, as equations, as drawings, as pictures, as constructs, as machines, as software, as figures, as fusion, as dance, as theatre, as music; spoken, sung, gestured, as lectures, as deceptions, as orders, as advertising, in German, in English, in the 16th Century, in the 18th Century, today; as photography, as email, as text message, as a wiki, as a blog. Melvilles Moby Dick, Edgar Allan Poe, Scorseses Godfather, NASAs Apollo missions, Kubricks 2001: A Space Odyssey, Spielbergs Star Wars, Tatis Play Time, Koolhaass New York, Jencks postmodernism, Loos Ornament, Wittgensteins wordplay, Heideggers Gestell. What does Ovid tell us, what scholastics, what is the turn of meaning in Shakespeare, Goethe, Nietzsche, Bach, Mozart, Wagner, Stockhausen, what in Vatel, Bocuse, Ducasse or Adria, what in Leibniz, Newton, Descartes, Lagrange, Maxwell, Einstein; how do Popper, Feyerabend, Chomsky, Kurzweil articulate themselves, how Derrida, Deleuze and Guattari? How are the big concepts reformulated and rephrased, over and over again? Element, substance, body, life, love, power, friendship, hospitality, fertility, symbolism, security, contemplation, freedom, fear, joy, nature, death, age, equilibrium, energy, matter, being, order, time. What are the narratives for their derived concepts: existence, health, childhood, vitality, progress, youth, intelligence, landscape, nutrition. Lectures and exercises to investigate and learn to read the big themes of our culture beyond their concrete manifestations. 4 weeks, November

Moreau, Hercules and the Hydra Lernaean - 1876

module 2 development Fiction

: A Space Odysee, 1968

Stanley Kubrick, 2001:

This visualization depicts specific atmospheric humidity on June 17, 1993, during the Great Flood that hit the Midwestern United States.

module 2 development Fiction

Bjork Yuri Gagarin, 1961

M2 B
module 2 application

Advanced Geometry Modelling

Frank Geh

module 2 B application Advanced Geometry Modelling

M2 B
Generative Components, CATIA, Pro/ENGINEER, Solid Works, Rhino, Revit, scripting, Grasshopper, processing, OpenGL... - Non-Euclidian geometry is now universally available. Only ten years ago, it belonged to the experts, 25 years ago to visionaries; 40 years ago the only people who had access to it were mathematicians. Today, the machines using it are on every desk, the software on every laptop, and the tutorials on YouTube. Secularisation. The fascination with its potential of this geometry, iterated a millionfold in blogs. But in actual fact, designing buildings or developing an architectural style, even in this environment, is only easy at first glance. How, for example, can you generate the continuities of, for instance, Hadid, UNStudio, NOX, Eisenman, Gehry, or the geometrical discontinuities of Liebeskind, Herzog & de Meuron, Ito or Sejima? How can we proceed in technology, without getting stuck within a very short time? How can we plan such buildings at a rate that were used to from regular geometry? How can we preserve our creative freedom within that technological complexity? How can we retain the flexibility of a small geometrical experiment when we apply it to a building that has been thought through in every detail? Lectures and exercises in advanced CAD modelling 4 weeks, November

hry, Dsseldorf (Germany) 2006.

ISTANBUL- Zaha Hadids Urban Transform

module 2 B application Advanced Geometry Modelling

mation Project for Kartal, 2008.

Peter Eisenman, Greater Columbus Convention Center, 199

module 2 B application Advanced Geometry Modelling

93.

CAAD 2005
Herzog & de Meuron, Beijing National Stadium, 2003.

Daniel Lee, Year of the Ox, Manimal, 1993.

M3 A
module 3 A research Design

and Construction of Connected Artefacts, or: The Global Availability of Physical Characteristics

Diagram of the of radio waves anten Nicola Tesla, US390721 Patent for a "Dynamo Electric Machine", 1888.

M3 A
Computers are general machines (Turing 1936). Not just all known, but also all future machines can be logically visualised through them. Computers are abstract from any physics (von Neumann, 1945). The networks of space and time (Baran, 1964, Licklider, 1960), reduced to minute, printed particles, connected with each other by electromagnetic modulations. Billions of them. Every computer, phone, machine. Design is no longer constructed from necessities, rather it condensates from the wealth of all possibilities. Rendered from virtual availability into concrete existence. And its so simple: mechanics from CNC production, electrical controls from do-it-yourself kits, general processors, accessible networks, a bit of software. This module offers practical exercises in the established manifestations of virtual information technology order systems, and an introduction to corresponding thought patterns. Over the last few years, electronic prototyping has evolved to the extent where any interested lay person can very quickly develop electronic gadgets and connect them to the mediality of the internet. This module gives an overview over the technological concepts and delivers a guide to building your own gadgets in electronics, software and mechanics. The Internet of Things, distributed computing, remote procedure calls, TCP/IP, URL, Google Earth, sensors, actuators, Arduino, automation, interaction technologies: processing, wiring, CNC production. Lectures and exercises in Electronics, Programming and CNC Production. Final presentation as a short video. 4 weeks, December and January

e electric fields (E) and magnetic fields (H) emitted by a monopole radio transmitting nna (small dark vertical line in the center).

Photodiode

module 3 A research Connected Artefacts

Paul Baran, "On Distributed Commu

unications" Series, 1964.

United States radio spectrum fre

module 3 A research Connected Artefacts

equency allocations chart as of 2011

88W8686-Chip, der 90 nm WLAN-Single Chip Solution by M

module 3 A research Connected Artefacts

Marvell, 2007.

Wiring, Processing

module 3 A research Connected Artefacts

CAAD 2009
3D Printer
42

CAAD 2009
wireless sensor system network for paragliding

M3 B
module 3 B development

Innovation

44

M3 B
Whatever you call out into the forest, the forest calls back at you. We call out into the forest with statistics, analyses, methodology, automaton, diagnoses, references, illustrations, didactics, safeguards. And for a long time, we got a lot of responses to these reductions and concentrations. The harvest was rich. But today, you could be forgiven for getting the impression that this way of going about things has exhausted itself. There is talk of limits to growth. There are calls for discipline, empathy, sustainability. But might it not be the case that we could see further, solve more problems, master more riddles, if we were to bypass the shortest possible route, the logical arguments and stringent analysis? If, instead of putting to one side - as so often demanded by critics of modernity methodology, because weve always known about it and now demand naturalisation and aestheticisation, we were to learn how to juggle the established methodologies, specialisms and manifold forms of articulation. Creative people know that problems and their solutions twist, turn and change the moment you articulate their narrative in a different medium or language. We might call this meta-rational. How then is it possible, in a networked world of ubiquitous accessibility, to look and listen, to ask questions, to examine, without blocking your own possibilities for the new, without losing the flexibility of future twists and turns. If we are looking for the new, we cannot depend on our established disciplines, methods and expertise. The new is neither out there, nor is it inside us; it doesnt lie rooted in our language or in differences of iteration. These manifestations of the concept of scarcity are what blocks our view. Could such a concept still be adequate in the context of a trillion links referenced by Google? The hypothesis of this module is that the new resides in the potential that derives from the concentration of that which is explicitly and rationally accessible. It lies in cultivating the rational. Lecture and exercises on the free availability of information and on the subject of indexability. 4 weeks, December and January

Hurricane Katrina, 2005.

module 3 B development Innovation

Frei Otto

Bertrand Piccard, Solar Impulse, 2010.

The Crown of Genghis Khan, 13th century.

M3 C
module 3 C application

Mass Customised Production

A very early example of constructions in non-eucledian geometry. Peter Cook, Kunsthaus Graz Austria, 2003.

module 3 C application Mass Customised Production

M3 C
Its contemporary CNC production methods that make non-standard buildings and the use of non-Euclidean geometry possible. Worlds of a difference lie between the qualities of Peter Cooks Kunsthaus in Graz (2003) and the Norpark Cable Railway by Zaha Hadid (2007). Using a master geometry and a continuous digital workflow from design via construction right through to production and logistics, buildings can be realised in freeform geometry at prices normally associated with serial production in the grid. Industrial production has emancipated itself from the grid, or the table, as the principle of order, coordination and logistics. Beyond that, 90% of architecture that is being built could be parametrically modularised, and could therefore be manufactured in CNC production without significantly affecting the architectural result in terms of spatiality, materials or construction. (Other economic sectors show that industrialisation makes possible an increase in productivity of 60% and a reduction in costs of 30% across the board. Applied to the construction industry globally the largest economic sector - this results in gigantic amounts.) The idea that industrial production brings about a uniform system of construction has been reversed: now systems are being developed for individual buildings and make possible a fantastical architecture in the first place.

So how do you dismantle buildings into parametric modules? How can you actually build Coop Himmelblau, Hadid, Gehry, UNStudio? How can you mass produce bespoke everyday architecture? Modularisation, standardisation, normalisation, parametrisation, deformation, configuration, integration, serialisation, master geometry, building construction, building services, building logistics, production code, production tools, production facilities.

Lectures and exercises in mass customised building production with field trips to production facilities. 4 weeks, December and January

CAAD 2005

Parametric master geometry. Zaha Hadid

200
D1- D1+ 132 136 D1- F1+ 119 181 D1- D1+ 203 137 D1- D1+ 139 144 D1- D1+ 139 145 D1- D1+ 148 554 D1- D1+ 553 157 D1- D1+ 209 212 D1- D1+ 241 242

module 3 C application Mass Customised Production

201

202

204

205

206

207

208

213

264

286
D1- D1+ 224 225

+ E16 163 7

178 C5 0 179 C6 0 180 A14 0 180 A13 1 179 C8 0 180 A14 1 182 A13 1 179 C12 0 180 C14 0 182 A14 1 211 E7 0 181 C8 0 263 E6 0 182 A14 0 211 E4 0 265 B13 0 263 B12 0 181 C6 0 265 B8 0 182 A13 0

180 A13 0

181 A11 0

182 A6 0 267 B7 0 266 B5 0 267 B10 0

CAAD 2005

268 B2 0

178 C8 0

268 B3 0 266 B8 0

178 C12 0

267 B11 0 268 B5 0

78 11 0 179 C11 0 181 C12 0 181 C11 0 182 C14 0 211 E9 0 263 E13 0

267 E3 0

268 B6 0 266 B13 0 265 E14 0 266 E14 0 267 E5 0 268 B13 0

178 D4 0

179 D4 0

180 D1 0

178
D1+ D1125 129 D1+ D1148 554 F1+ D1202 130 D1+ D1147 152 D1+ D1209 212

179

180

181

182

211

263
F2+ D1471 320 477

265
D1+ D1525 324

266
D1+ D1249 250

267
D1+ F1228 290

268
D1+ E1+ 255 303

+ D19 124

d, Hungerburgbahn, 2006.

The sewing pattern for components of a skulpture by Daniel Libeskind resolved by a genetic algorith
A6 0 0 148 A13 1 148 A14 1 147 A13 0 150 D5 0 148 C14 0 149 D2 0 150 D13 0 150 D14 0 150 D6 0 149 D1 0 150 D3 0 149 C14 0 0 141 D2 0 142 D5 0 141 D5 0 147 A14 0 153 A14 0 142 D8 0 147 A13 1 147 A14 1 148 D1 0 149 D3 0 148 D2 0 149 D5 0 141 D8 0 142 D13 0 147 C14 0 142 F14 0 150 D13 1 140 D8 0 150 D14 150 1 F14 0 153 C14 0 153 D1 0

A8 0 139 A13 0 140 C13 0 139 C14 0 140 D2 0

138 A13 0

138 C14 0 140 D5 0 139 D2 0 133 F13 0 138 C13 0 139 D5 0 133 F6 0

139 C13 0

B1 159

(137) A1 A2 510 139 511 A2 138 206 B1 205 A2 141 199 A2 530 161

138
(137) (136) C0 A2 141 170 (136) A2 A1 140 142 497 (135) (146,146) A1 C1 44 182 (145,145) B1 B1 180 207

139

140

141

142

147

148

(144,144) B1 C1 173 171

149

B2 163 466

(518,143)

150

A2 364 462

(152,152) B0 A1 553

153

137 A8 0 146 A8 0

146 A5 0

152 A6 0 152 A13 1 151 D1 0 151 D2 0

136 C13 0 136 C12 0 137 C6 0 143 D5 0 143 D8 0 144 D2 0 145 C14 0

137 A12 0 144 C13 0

144 C14 0 145 A13 0

156 C14 0 155 D1 0 152 A14 1

156 A14 0

146 A13 0

152 A13 0

136 D4 0

155 D3 0 145 C13 0 152 A14 0

156 D1 0

137 C13 0 137 C12 0

143 D13 0

155 D6 0 151 D3 0

136 D8 0 137 D4 0 143 F14 0 136 D12 0

144 D5 0

145 D2 0 146 C13 0

146 C14 0

151 D5 151 0 D6 0

152 C14 0 152 D1 0

155 D14 0

156 D3 0 156 D6 0

A2 135 198

(141,140) B1 201 B2 177 204 A2 31 52

136
(139,138)

137

(150) A1 A2 363 518 161

143

(149,149) B1 B1 170 205

144

(148,148) C0 B1 206

145

(147,147) B1 A2 511 39 54

146

(154,154) B1 C1 166 171

151

(153,153) A1 C1 554 182

152

155
A2 373 467

156
A2 156 167 A1 155 C1 174

202 C3 0 201

204 C6 0 205 C14 0

206 A8 0

207 A13 0 206 A13 0

207 A14 0

208 A6 0

CAAD 2005

hm.
153 A6

138 139 A8 0 147 A5 0 147 148 A13 148 0 A14

CAAD 2005
One-of a kind production.

CAAD 2005

Daniel Libeskind, Sculpture, St. Gallen, 2006.

M4
module 4 theory

Archtecture and Information


CAAD 2005

M4
What could be more fantastical, of more consequence, than building a new city? Or a new house? Hunting a hog or ploughing a field is easy enough, you can follow a natural order. But building a new city? Thats pure imagination, pure virtuality. On a small, carefully chosen and defined plot of land, a city can be anything we want it to be. There, in that particular abstraction of territory, there are no qualitative boundaries, except those set by our own imagination, which in turn has been shaped over time by the rhythms of the fields that lie under the sun. Today, thus our contention, it is no longer the cultivation of fields that is being visualised and whose surpluses find articulation in the cities. Through information technology it is our cities themselves that are being cultivated. Today we look for virtualisations and architectural articulations on a new plateau. What, then, are the imaginings, the thought patterns that are being shown to us by Vitruvius, Palladio, Ledoux, Durand, Semper, Loos, Wright, Corbusier, Sullivan, Rossi, Krier, Ungers, Alexander, Otto, Venturi, Eisenman, Libeskind, Hadid, Gehry, Lynn, Herzog & de Meuron, Zumthor, Koolhaas? What are the virtualities, what the urbanities described by deconstructivism, structuralism, post-structuralism, minimalism, functionalism, international style, modernity, postmodernism, existentialism, phenomenology, behaviourism, positivism, vitalism? Lets cultivate these ideas for our new architecture and our new cities. Lectures, seminar and exercises in reading and writing. Final presentation as a short video. 4 weeks, January and February

La Cit de Carcassonne

Park in Isphahan, 2010.

module 4 theory Archtecture and Information

St. Mary's Church, Lbeck, Germany, 1250-1350

Notre Dame de Paris, 1163-1345

module 4 theory Archtecture and Information

Anonymous 17th-century watercolor of the Semper Augustus, famous for being the most expensive tulip sold during tulip mania.

module 4 theory Archtecture and Information

The Futurist City by Antonio St'Elia., 1914

Apple Computer, Think Different: Hitchcock, Boston 2000.

module 4 theory Archtecture and Information

Herzog & de Meuron, Elbe Philharmonic Hall, Hamburg, 2007.

module 5A research Customised Materials

M5 A
module 5 A research

Design and Construction with Customised Materials Printed Physics

Doping material with ions

module 5A research Customised Materials

M5 A
Material availability - the explosion of materials - the search for construction that is appropriate to materials no longer boiled, refined, concentrated, arduous, cleansed - materials are being thought up and made, drawn from the earth, in controlled processes. The most explicit manifestation of this is found in doping, the deliberate adding of impurities - materials achieve what weve never been able to achieve through continuities: they turn sunlight into electricity, they glow, shine, gleam, oscillate, move, see, smell, hear, sound, absorb, concentrate, switch, operate logically... simply because weve coded them, doped them.

This module conveys, by way of exercises, the methods of material doping. What we are looking for are material constructions which articulate these constructed material properties into new kinds of constructions. Processing, wiring, CNC production.

Lectures and exercises in Electronics, Programming and CNC Production. Final presentation as a short video. 4 weeks, March

s.

Light emitting foil

CAAD 2010
Kinetic foil.

l.

CAAD 2010
Shape Shift, 2010.

module 5A research Customised Materials

CAAD 2006
Metal sheet blow ups. Zieta.

CAAD 2009

Jean Prouve,

module 5A research Customised Materials

Ink Jet Bubbles.

module 5A research Customised Materials

Brussels, Grand Place, 2007.


70

module 5A research Customised Materials

Print. Herzog & de Meuron, Ricola Mlhausen-Brunstatt, Switzerland 2000.


71

Valerio Olg

module 5A research Customised Materials

M5 B
module 5 B development

Articulation

giati, The Yellow House, Flims, Switzerland, 1999.

Europe by satellite.

module 5 B development Articulation

M5 B
Its so easy to play the individual disciplinary, medial and technological channels. Theres no problem producing a satellite picture showing us the hole in the ozone layer, calculating a model that simulates the climate on planet earth, publishing a video report about the revolution in Egypt, generating imagery that shows the phenomena at work in our brain, developing the crumple zone for a new car, making an artificial nose to aid wine tasting, designing a curved facade for a new airport building, going for a week-long hike in the Amazon, attending a threeday conference in Seoul, manufacturing a computer chip in Taiwan, selling your old printer on eBay to a man in Stockholm, making a phone call to the slums of Mumbai, buying shares in a start-up in Chicago... theres no problem doing anything we like. The many standards we use: ASCII, dtp, html, TCP, JPEG, MP3, AVI, Linux, AJAX, USB, UPnP, DXF, MEL, TCL, JAVA, GSM, GPS, UPC, IBAN - there are thousands. And the technologies we use for the development of our buildings: building layout generators, building structure simulation, building automation, finite elements analysis, photorealistic rendering and printing, one-of-a-kind production, 3D printing... Or, more generally: energy harvesting, ubiquitous logic, worldwide logistics, mobile phones, social media, micro-banking... An ever more densely populated carpet of electronic media. The idea that for a development project, for research, for thought itself one of these channels could suffice - and it doesnt matter whether it be a classical channel such as a scientific journal, a lecture, a political book, a journalists picture, an eye witness report, a technical development, a new product, or any of the new media channels - becomes increasingly absurd. More and more, these channels can be utilised automatically; rendering content into any of these channels becomes easier all the time, and its being done more and more frequently. The channels themselves keep getting broader. And increasingly its not us, but the channels that determine the content. The medium is the message. (McLuhan). Time to take a step back. Time to find the right level of abstraction for our projects, our articulations. Time to learn to understand what we can do with information, what the code is that can play all these channels. It, the code, brings about a new substrate. With it, we can learn seriously, and at the same time fantastically. Cross-media story telling. We want to learn to cultivate the logical channels (exactly not the magical channels [McLuhan, 1964], and not the sacred channels [Hrl, 2006], and neither a metaphysics of mediality [Krmer, 2009]), so as to be able to create the fantastical.

Lectures and exercises in the Articulation of the Fantastical. 4 weeks, March

A bomber captured on CCTV at Luton station at 7:21 am on 7 Ju

uly 2005.

Humanoid walking robot, Cornell University, 2005.

Future Systems, Selfridges (Birmingham), 2003.

module 5 B development Articulation

Ski Dubai, 2005.

module 5 B development Articulation

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 2006. Josie has also been suffering from low hemoglobin and low iron for some as yet undetermined reason. Because of this Josie is going to have a peripheral catheter put into her hand through which she'll get a blood transfusion to help this conditions ...

module 5 B development Articulation

Junya Ishigami, the japanese pavilion at the Architectural Biennale in Venice 2008.

M5 C
module 5 C application

Building Information Models

RFID chip.

module 5 C application Building Informa

M5 C
The construction industry is under increasing pressure from economists. They, not unreasonably, want to know what it is that theyll get, when theyll get it, at what price and to what specification. To the end of quantitative transparency, so called Industry Foundation Classes (IFC) were formulated in 1995 by American and European AEC (Architecture Engineering and Construction) firms and promoted worldwide by the institution buildingSMART in 2005. The IFC derives from the production information model standards IGES and STEP from the year 1980. IFC pursues a hypothesis that it is possible to describe every building that has ever been built, as well as every building that is ever going to be built, no matter in which part of the world or culture it happens to be, by a hierarchical system of pre-defined formulas. This, to us, seems somewhat crazy. These long-term efforts, within a set-up that is in itself adventurous, lead to a situation where technicians draw up more and more tables into which practitioners make more and more erroneous entries, if they are using them at all. Yet still economists demand this type of solution, because it has been shown to work in other industries, and so they increasingly cause a reduction of architecture to simplistic quantities. Wikipedia, Google and the success stories of the internet in general demonstrate a different path towards solutions. There is no technological need for tables, nor for strict hierarchies, there is no reason for specifications before designing a building just in order to enable transparencies and comparison and with it open competition and quality standards. So how can buildings be modelled in such a way that effective cost management is possible early on in the planning, while allowing for the prerequisite architectural freedom? How is it possible to model in such a way that buildings can be compared with each other? So that learnings and experiences can quickly and efficiently be applied to other projects? So that jobs and mistakes dont have to be repeated three, five, a hundred or a thousand times?

Lectures and exercises in building information models, databases, standards, modules, abstractions, flexibilities, indexing and cost management. 4 weeks, March

module 5 C application Building Information Models

Somewhere in the US.


82

The plots of Zrich, sorted by size.

CAAD 2009

CAAD Seminar Week Ispha

ahan

CAAD 2010

Herzog & de Meuron, Elbe Philharmonic Hall, Hamburg, 2010.

HRL DN15 HVL DN15

HRL DN15 HVL DN15

HRL DN15 HVL DN15

HRL DN15 HVL DN15

Typ B
L=220 L=220 L=220 L=220

Typ B

Typ B

Typ B Typ B

Typ B Typ B

Typ B Typ B

Typ B

Falleitung nach unten

565x400 32 -0,15 UKRD RW DN70 -0,15UKRD


Schako Ib-R 815x115 Schako Ib-R 815x115 Schako Ib-R 815x115

KT 300
KT 300

KT 300

KT 300

DN 25 DN50 AL 500
Schako Ib-R 815x115 Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50 AL 450

Kugelhahn Druckluft

DN50

DN50 AL 400
Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50

DN50 AL 355
Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50 A

565x400

AW DN 100

AW DN 100

DN 65

Entl. DN 100

565x400 ZL 500 DN50


250
KT 300

ZL 450 DN50
250
Kugelhahn Druckluft

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD

ZL 400 DN50 DN50


KT 300

ZL 355 DN50
KT 300

DN 25 KT 300

DN50
250 250

DN50
250
KT 30

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 15 DN 40 DN 40

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 20

DN 25 DN 40

DN 25 DN 40

DN 32 DN 32

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 32

DN 32 DN 32 DN 32

DN 32 DN 32

DN 40 DN 25

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 40

DN 40 DN 25

DN 40 DN 25 DN 20

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 40

Sammelleitung RW DN100 L=600 Zusammenfhrung 1m ueber FFB

DN 15
KT 300 KT 300 KT 300

Prefabricated modules for service systems of a production hall for pharmaceutical products. digitales bauen 2003.

KT 300
RW DN50
RW DN50

RW DN50

DN 25 DN50 565x400
Schako Ib-R 815x115

2 KT 400

DN50 AL 450

Kugelhahn Druckluft

DN50 RW DN70 -0,40 UKRD


Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50 AL 400
RW DN 50 RW DN 50

DN50 RW DN40 -0,40 UKRD


Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50 AL 355
Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50

AL 500 RW DN40 -0,20 UKRD RW DN70 -0,40 UKRD

GK Rauchschrze -40 ab UKUZ


AW DN 100 Entl. DN 100

AW DN 100

DN 65

565x400 DN 25
250

ZL 500 DN50
KT 300

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD ZL 450 DN50


250
Kugelhahn Druckluft

ZL 400 DN50 DN50


KT 300

ZL 355 DN50
KT 300

DN50
250 250

DN50
250
KT 30

KT 300

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 15 DN 40

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 20

DN 25 DN 40 DN 40

DN 25 DN 40

DN 32 DN 32

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 32

DN 32 DN 32 DN 32

DN 32 DN 32

DN 40 DN 25

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 40

DN 40 DN 25

DN 40 DN 25 DN 20

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 40

CAAD 2003
DV
280 x 180 5,04 qm

DN 15 KT 300
KT 300 KT 300 KT 300

DN 25 565x400

DN50 AL 500

DN50 AL 450

Kugelhahn Druckluft

DN50

DN50 AL 400

DN50

DN50 AL 355

DN50 A

KT 300

L=250

DN 25 DN50 DN50 DN50 DN50 DN50 DN50


Schlauchanschluss

DN 25 DN50
250
KT 300 KT 300 KT 300

L=250 AW DN 100 AW DN 100 Entl. DN 100

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

L=250

565x400 ZL 500 DN50


250 250 250
Kugelhahn Druckluft DN25

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD ZL 450 ZL 400 DN50


DN25

ZL 355 DN50

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD mit Geflle

L=250

DN50

L=250

L=250

DN50

DN50

DN50
250

KT 300

KT 300

DN50

DV

DV

DV

DV

DV

L=540

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

Fan-Filter-Unit

Fan-Filter-Unit

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

2 KT 300

DN150

KT 200

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

DN 25 DN50 AL 500
RW DN 50

DN 25 DN50
250
KT 300 KT 300

565 x 400 L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 15 DN 40 DN 40
KT 300 KT 300 KT 300 KT 300

DN 20 DN 40 DN 40 DN 32 DN 32 DN 32 DN 32 DN 25 DN 25

DN 25

DN 25

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

DN 40

DN 40

DN 40

DN 40 DN 25 DN 20

DN 40

DN 15 KT 300 DN50 AL 355


Schako Ib-R 815x115

KT 300 DN50 AL 450 AL 400


Kugelhahn Druckluft

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50 A
RW DN 50

RW DN 70

WB WW Boiler

AW DN 100

AW DN 100

DN 40
Entl. DN 100

565x400 ZL 500 ZL 450 DN50


250 250
Kugelhahn Druckluft
Ltg aus EG

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD

ZL 400 DN50
KT 300

ZL 355 DN50
250

DN50

DN50

DN50
250
KT 300

KT 300

DN50

DV

DV

DV

DV

DV

L=540

Fan-Filter-Unit

Fan-Filter-Unit

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

2 KT 300

DN150

KT 200

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

DN 25 DN50 AL 500
Schako Ib-R 815x115 Schako Ib-R 815x115

1000 x 400 L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 15 DN 40 DN 40
KT 300 KT 300

DN 20 DN 40 DN 40 DN 32 DN 32 DN 32

DN 25

DN 25

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32 DN 32

DN 40 DN 25

DN 40

DN 40 DN 25
KT 300

DN 40 DN 25 DN 20

DN 40

DN 15
KT 300

KT 300 DN50 AL 450 AL 400


Kugelhahn Druckluft

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50 AL 355
Schako Ib-R 815x115 Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50 A

565x400

AW DN 100

AW DN 100

DN 50
Entl. DN 100

565x400 ZL 500 DN50


250 250 250

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD ZL 450 DN50


Kugelhahn Druckluft

ZL 400 DN50 DN50


250

ZL 355 DN50 DN50 2KT KT 300 400


250

DN 25 DN50 KT 300

KT 300

KT 300

2KT 300 KT 300 /

DN50

DV

DV

DV

DV

DV

L=540

Fan-Filter-Unit

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

DN150

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

1100 x 500 L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DN 15 DN 40 DN 40 DN 40 DN 40

DN 20

DN 25

DN 25

DN 32 DN 32

DN 32

DN 32 DN 32 DN 32

DN 32 DN 32

DN 40 DN 25

DN 40

DN 40 DN 25

DN 40 DN 25 DN 20

DN 40

DN 15

DN50

DV

DV

DV

DV

DV

L=540

Symbol fehlt L=600

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

Fan-Filter-Unit

Fan-Filter-Unit

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

DN150

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

1250 x 600 L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

KT 300

L=600

DV Verteiler

RW

RW DN 50

DN50

DV

DV

DV

DV

Symbol fehlt L=600

L=540

Fan-Filter-Unit

Fan-Filter-Unit

2 KT 300

2 KT 200

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

DN150

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

1550 x 600 L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

KT 300

L=600

DN50 KT 300 / KT

KT 300

HVL DN15

KT 300

2K

KT 300

KT 300

2K

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

2 KT 300

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=250

Typ B

DN 15

DN 40

250

DV
L=600

DN 40

250

DV
L=600

DN 15

250

DV
L=600

250

DV
L=600

250

DV DN 50
L=600

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

280 x 180 5,04 qm

DN 40

DN 20

DN 40

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN 20

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN25

L=540

AW DN 100

280 x 180 5,04 qm

KD Option 180

KD Option 180 AW DN 100

KD Option 180

L=540

L=540

L=540

L=540

AW DN 100

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN50

L=250

L=250

L=250

Typ B

KD Option 180
Fan-Filter-Unit

280 x 180 5,04 qm


L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

L=600

L=250

ZL 355

ZL 355

ZL 355

ZL 355

AL 355

AL 355

AL 355

AL 355

ZL 355

DN 40

DN 25

DN 40

DN 25

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

AL 355

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

DN50

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

RW DN 50

L=250

HVL DN15

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KT 200

KT 300

KT 300

KT 200

Typ B

KT 300

KT 300

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600 DN 50
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=250

DN 40

DN 25

DN 40

250

DV
L=600

250

DV
L=600

DN 25

250

DV
L=600

250

DV
L=600

250

DV
L=600

L=250

RW DN40 -0,20 UKRD

ZL 400

ZL 400

ZL 400

ZL 400

ZL 400

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

L=250

DN 40

DN 25

DN 40

DN 25

Typ B

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

L=600

DN25

W N 100

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

KD Option 180 AW DN 100

KD Option 180 L=600


Schako Ib-R 815x115 Schako Ib-R 815x115

KD Option 180 AW DN 100 L=600

AW DN 70
Schako Ib-R 815x115

AW DN 70

L=250 < Entlftung Hebeanlag

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD

DN 32

L=600

L=600

L=600

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD

L=600

L=600

AW DN70 -0,40 UKRD AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD

DN 50

DN50

L=250

L=250

Typ B

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

AW DN100 -0,40 UKRD

L=250

AL 400

AL 400

AL 400

AL 400

AL 400

2 KT 300

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

RWA L=600 1,25 x 1,25

DN50

Staplerladestation 400V L=250

HVL DN15

Entl. DN 100

KT 200

KT 200

KT 300

KT 300

Typ B

KT 300

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

KT 300

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=250

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

Entl. DN 100

250

DV
L=600

Entl. DN 100

250

DV
L=600

DN 32

Entl. DN 100

250

DV
L=600

Entl. DN 100

250

DV
L=600

Entl. DN 100

250

DV
L=600

RW DN40 -0,40 UKRD

L=250

KD Option 180
Fan-Filter-Unit

280 x 180 5,04 qm


L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180

Entl. DN 100

DN 50
L=600

L=600

L=250

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD ZL 450

AW DN100 -0,15 UKRD ZL 450

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

DN 32

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

ZL 450

ZL 450

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

L=600
Schako Ib-R 815x115

L=600

DN25

AW DN 100

AW DN 100

ZL 450

280 x 180 5,04 qm

280 x 180 5,04 qm

KD Option 180

KD Option 180 L=600


Schako Ib-R 815x115

KD Option 180 L=600

RW DN50 -0,40 UKRD

AW DN 100

Schako Ib-R 815x115

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

Schako Ib-R 815x115

DN 25

DN 40

DN 25

DN 40

DN50

RW DN 50

Typ B

L=250

L=250

L=250

Typ B

280 x 180 5,04 qm


Kugelhahn Druckluft Kugelhahn Druckluft Kugelhahn Druckluft
L=600

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

RW DN 50

Kugelhahn Druckluft

Kugelhahn Druckluft

Kugelhahn Druckluft

Kugelhahn Druckluft

Kugelhahn Druckluft

Kugelhahn Druckluft

Fan-Filter-Unit

L=600 DN50

L=600

L=600 DN50

L=600 DN50

Kugelhahn Druckluft

L=250 Sammelleitung RW DN100 Zusammenfhrung 1m ueber FFB

DN 25

DN 40

DN 25

AL 450

DN 40

AL 450

AL 450

AL 450

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

DN50

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

2 KT 300

AL 450

2 KT 200

DN50

2 KT 200

2 KT 200

DN50

L=250

HVL DN15

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KD Option 180

KT 300

KT 300

KT 200

KT 300

KT 200

Typ B

KT 300

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

KT 300

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

L=250

250

DV
Symbol fehlt L=600

250

DV
L=600

250

DV
L=600

250

DV
L=600

250

DV
L=600

AL 500 RW DN40 -0,20 UKRD

RW DN50 -0,40 UKRD

DN 20

DN 40

DN 20

DN 40

KT 300

L=250

AL 500

AL 500

AL 500

280 x 180 5,04 qm


L=600

280 x 180 5,04 qm

KD Option 180 L=600

KD Option 180 L=600

AL 500

KD Option 180 L=600

ZL 500

ZL 500

ZL 500

ZL 500

Schako Ib-R 815x115

Schako Ib-R 815x115

Schako Ib-R 815x115

Schako Ib-R 815x115

ZL 500

L=600

L=250

DN 100

DN 15

DN 40

DN 15

DN 40

DN 50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

Schako Ib-R 815x115

Typ B

DN50

DN50

DN50

DN50

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

L=600

RW DN50

250

W N 100

280 x 180 5,04 qm

250

DN150
L=600

280 x 180 5,04 qm

250
AW DN 100

KD Option 180

250

KD Option 180 L=600 AW DN 100


Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

250

DN150
L=600

DN 150
L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

CAAD 2009
KD Option 180 L=600
Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

Sammelleitung RW DN100 Zusammenfhrung 1m ueber FFB RW RW DN50 L=250

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DV
L=600

DV DN 65
L=600

Indultherm 600x600 Fa. Kiefer

DV DN 80 VL
L=600

DV
L=600

DV
L=600

DN 65

565x400

565x400

KT 300

KT 300

KT 300

KT 300

KT 300

Anschluss Konvektoren an Ringleitung im EG DN 150 s. Detailblatt: "Hauptbaugruppen Heizung" DN 100

DN 150 2 KT 300
L=600 L=250

DN 25

DN 25

DN 25

DN 25

DN 25

L=600

DN 25

1550 x 600 L=600

1850 x 600 L=600

2200 x 600

2 KT 300

L=600

L=600

L=600

Detailplan TPI

VL RL
L=600

0 -0,20 UKRD

565x400

565x400

WH

DN50

L=250

L=250

L=250

ge

Bauherr:

Roche Diagnostics GmbH D-68305 Mannheim Sandhofer Strae 116 Tel.: 0621-759-0

i.V.

HRL DN15

D
1011 Zuluft 5001 Halfen 1001 Doppelboden 60/60 1011 Abluft

1013 Khldecke
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1001 Doppelboden 60/75 - F30

1010 HVL 1010 HRL

1026 EDV-Trasse

1028 Starkstrom 1001 Bodentank

1014 Sprinkler

1015 Druckluft

1028 Starkstrom

E
1020 Licht

A8K1 20.10.03 A8K0 05.08.03 A7K0 28.11.02 A6K1 23.05.02

o,h o,h o,h r,h

---------

------TPI

nderungen Sanitr und Druckluft nach Angaben TKT neuer Architekturhintergrund neuer Architekturhintergrund neuer Architekturhintergrund A6A0, RW Fallleitung Achse G6 / G11, Heizkrper Achse H6, Khldecken auf 140 gendert Achse C9 wegen Trennwand Einarbeitung des neuen DV-Konzeptes nderungen zum geprften Planstand A5D7 v.18.03.02 eingearbeitet. nderung

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A5K2 16.04.02 A5K1 21.03.02 Index Datum


Copyright 1998

r,h r,h Gez.

----Gepr.

TPI TPI Gepr.

alle Rechte vorbehalten, auch fr den Fall von Schutzrechtsanmeldungen bei Roche Diagnostics GmbH, Technik-Planung

Jede Verfgungsbefugnis, sowie das Kopier- und Weitergaberecht liegt bei uns

Copyright

1998

all rights, even for the case of protection right application by Roche Diagnostics GmbH, Technik-Planung

All order authority as well as the copy- and pass on right is by us

Datum: Datum: Datum:


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20.10.2003 20.10.2003

Gez.:

Ott

Unterschrift: Unterschrift:

Gepr.: Hovestadt
Index:

bersicht:
183/1

083

183/2

D7

Indexed floor plans of Zrich, Switzerland.

CAAD 2009

062

061

170/1

Autoselection and -adaptation of indexed floorplans according to individual needs.

CAAD 2007

CAAD 2009

M6 A
module 6 A research

Designing Beyond the Problematic, or: Design Under the Premise of General Availabilities

M6 A
With all these manifold availabilities, we, with our problems, tend to get in our own way. We cant see the wood for the trees. In view of all the analysis and statistics, we are blind to the causes. We dont see what next steps are adequate. (We dont want to keep talking about solutions any more, seeing that we want to go beyond thinking in terms of problems.) Yet we could create approaches to issues such as urbanity, sophistication, modes of living, friendliness, inspiration, openness, concentration, creativity, liveliness, differentiation, narratives, styles and fashions, beyond individual parameters. A new way of looking at things in a new environment of information makes these creative potentials available to us. We are calling this Non-Turing-Computing.

This module offers practical exercises in meta-logical order systems and gives an introduction to the corresponding thought processes. Self-organising maps, reaction diffusion diagrams, JAVA, Eclipse.

Lectures and exercises in advanced programming concepts. Final presentation as a short video. 4 weeks, April. Reaction Diffusion Diagram

Self Organizing Map clustering schemes of flo

oor plans.

CAAD 2010

eboy Tokyo

Compression

ns by Rem Koolhaas, Content, 2004.

Er

Shape grammar. Project Sdpark by Herzog & de Meuron, Basel Switzerland 2006.

Peter Zumthor, Kolumba rzbischfliches Dizesanmuseum, Cologne (Kln), Germany. 2007.

CAAD 2006

# 108

CAAD 2009

M6 B
module 6 B development

Population

Prada 2009

M6 A
How can we evaluate all these cross-media narratives? Is it sufficient for something to work, for something to be correct, for it to have been checked, said out loud and clear, in a world of logical channels? Can we find stabilities in fixing, in referencing, in illustrating, in looking, if everything is absorbed in logical channels? Here, stability and order can no longer be found, they have to be made. In the repetitions (Deleuze, 1968), in the populations, in exercises (Sloterdijk, 2009), in the ever renewed narratives, in the differences in time, in space, in the articulations of the various channels. What, though, is it that needs to be told in order to create stabilities across these various channels, to popularise a narrative, to make a story valuable. We cant invent any new stories. So, what can we rely on? We have to pass them on, the big stories, tell them afresh, modulate them. Body, life, love, power, friendship, hospitality, fertility, security, contemplation, freedom, fear, joy, nature, death, age, equilibrium, health, childhood, vitality, progress, youth, intelligence, landscape, nutrition...

So how do journalists, political scientists, sociologists, economists, communication scientists deal with this situation? How does Nestl, for example, tell the narrative of body and hospitality, Siemens the narrative of technology and progress, whats the story of Apple, of SAP, of IBM, whats the story about the knowledge of Google, the novelty of Facebook, what is the technology story as told by MIT, what the story of history and values of Harvard, what is Marlboros story about freedom, whats the story that liberalism tells us about the history of ethics, what does Swiss Re tell us about security, what Nike about our bodies, what does Formula 1 tell us, what BMW about motion, what the French revolution about freedom, whats the story that Marxism tells us... What are the channels that are successfully being played by H&M, Toyota, Novartis, Nokia, IBM, SAP, Google, by the Louvre, by Harvard, by UBS, Walt Disney, by Rem Koolhaas?

Lectures and exercises in the dissemination of the great narratives into popular culture 4 weeks, April

Parmigianino, Self-portrait in a Convex Mirror, 1524.

William Turner, Rain, Steam, and Speed - The Western Railway

e Great y, 1844

Al Gore, An Inconvenient Truth, 2006.

Yann Arthus-Bertrand, Home, 2009.

Tsunami in Japan, 11 March 2011

Gnomon Apollo 11, 1967.

Herzog & de Meuron, Schaulager Basel 2003.

M6 C
module 6 C application

Building Operation Models

Power station Weisweiler, Ge

M6 C
Between 30% and 60% of the investment cost for new buildings goes towards building technology. Building technology itself develops from central, hierarchical systems - so called central building control systems - to locally distributed and IT-networked systems. The focus is no longer on the temperature, brightness or level of humidity that is being brought about; instead, whats being created are atmospheres for animated discussion, concentrated study, security, access, maintenance, logistics, navigations, displays, transmissions, readiness, availability, efficiencies, services, management, accounting.

In hospitals, within 6 years of completion, running the building costs more than its original investment for construction. In offices, its 10 years. Thus, new business models evolve. Buildings become smart. Services are being articulated into the building by its users, rather than functions being produced by the building for the user. Middleware, building services, building automation, SPS, PLC, zigbee, digitalSTROM, UIN, facilities management, persistence, multi-hierarchical databases, SAP integration, WEB, mobile phones, interaction, tracking, accounting...

Lectures and exercises on building automation and service models. 4 weeks, April

ermany since 1913.

Solar-powered lanterns recharging, Barefoot C

College, Ajmer, Rajasthan, India, 2006.

CAAD 2009
Single chip, high voltage computer with power line communication for building automation, digitalSTROM, 2009.

Crystal mesh media facade, realities:united, Singapore 2009.

Minato Tokyo

HASSELL architects, ANZ Centre, Melburne 2010.

CAAD 2010

Builidng automation and management, digitalSTROM, mivune, 2010.

Arriving late night at Dizengoff square, Tel Aviv, 2010.

Decentralized HVAC module, ETH Zrich GT, 2008.

ETHZ 2008

emission free ocean world

solar pv

cold water

Solar & ambient gains

Waste-heat

Cooling Electrical power

Power storage

Fresh water storage

Chiller Service water

CAAD 2007

Water treatment Solid-waste

Cleaned water for irrigation

Fresh H 2 O

Evaporation

Emmision free building service, ETH Zrich CAAD & GT, 2007.

v desalination cold water

Waste-heat
Desalination Persian Gulf 3000 m / d water

Fresh water storage

Chiller Cleaned water for irrigation Fresh H 2 O


PV-tracker 16'500 kWh / d 100'000 m

ste

Evaporation

CAAD in collaboration with GT ETHZ viagialla.ch, 2006

M7
module 7: theory

Information and I

IIT camp

M7
Its not easy, finding your own position as an architect. With our technologies, we accelerate everything: more people, more mobility, more television, more images, more phones, more networks, more research, more publications, more complexity, more statistics, more rubbish, more technology, more advertising, more consumerism... Google, Twitter, games, leisure, over-ageing, privacy, intellectual property, corporate communications, global village, mega-cities, economy drives, liberalism, marketing, entertainment, war architecture... Its easy to think that all this could be halted, that it could all slow down, that it is possible to cast an anchor an arrest the movement. Sustainability, misery, crisis, scarce resources, nature, empathy, renunciation, limitation, insurance, reassurance, delegation, the original, the origin, territory, land, causes, simplicity, clarity, guilt, regeneration, recycling, recreation, creation, simplicity, materials-appropriate construction... but information technology is of a different nature. Which is why our old concepts are not sufficient to grasp it or its phenomena. Just as described in the fable of the Hare and the Tortoise: the hare kills himself running and the tortoise doesnt even get out of breath. Thats exactly what were witnessing: we feel washed away every time we try to cast an anchor, within the sea of our old conceptions. And so, adrift, we keep looking for an equilibrium in arranging our belongings. But how about, instead of casting anchors, we learn to surf?

Lectures, seminar and exercises in conceptualising. Final presentation as a short video. 4 weeks, May

pus, Chicago, 2010.

brose, Hallstadt Germany, 2003.

Delhi

Coney Island

Jan van Huijsum - Vase of Flowers in a Niche, 1720-40.

Individual Thesis

your choice 12 weeks in June - September

IABR 4. Internationale Architektur Biennale Rotterdam 24. September 2009 10. Januar 2010 Rotterdam-Amsterdam

Gwangju De biennale cur Sept. 2nd

ETHZ 2009

ETHZ 20

esign Biennale: The Sixth Order, rated by Ai Wei Wei and Seung H-Sang, Oct. 23rd 2011

011

ET

TH Zrich Hnggerberg campus

CAAD The Chair of CAAD (Computer Aided Architectural Design) represents the information-technology branch at the ETH's Department of Architecture. The Chair was newly vested with Ludger Hovestadt at the end of year 2000, which led to a paradigm shift in its orientation. Since then the aim has no longer been to illustrate architecture within the computer (simulation, virtual reality), but to once more extract architecture from the computer (back to reality) in order to think, design and build artefacts, which cannot be realised by conventional methods. To attain these goals, the CAAD Group employs a uniquely large faculty of teachers and researchers, which is formed in an interdisciplinary manner and is at its core oriented towards a pragmatic conversion of information technologies in architecture.

ETH Zrich ETH Zrich is one of Europe's leading research universities. The school attracts excellent faculty members and draws on a large community of architects, theorists and practitioners in the field. The Department of Architecture is particularly vibrant, with a large number of exhibitions, conferences and lectures. See the Department of Architecture's site for further information and for a list of current events: www.arch.ethz.ch

A programme by Prof. Ludger Hovestadt Architecture, Computer Science Dr. Vera Bhlmann Philosophy, Literature, Media Theory Michael Hansmeyer Architecture, Computational Art Manuel Kretzer Architecture

see YOU in Zrich

ETHZ CAAD 02.2012

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