Active buildings: What can we do about buildings that simply stand still?

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Abstract

This paper presents background of our research and result of our pilot study to find methods for convincing building users to become active building participants. We speculate this is possible by allowing and motivating users to customise and manage their own built environments. The ultimate aim of this research is to develop open, flexible and adaptive systems that bring awareness to building users to the extent they recognise spaces are for them to change rather than accept spaces are fixed and they are the ones to adapt. We argue this is possible if the architectural hardware is designed to adapt to begin with and more importantly if there are appropriate user interfaces that are designed to work with the hardware. A series of simple prototypes were made to study possibilities through making, installing and experiencing them. Ideas discussed during making and experiencing of prototypes were evaluated to generate further ideas. This method was very useful to speculate unexplored and unknown issues with respect to developing user interfaces for active buildings. ©2011, Association for Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia (CAADRIA).

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CITATION STYLE

APA

Santo, Y., Frazer, J. H., & Drogemuler, R. (2011). Active buildings: What can we do about buildings that simply stand still? In Circuit Bending, Breaking and Mending - Proceedings of the 16th International Conference on Computer-Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia, CAADRIA 2011 (pp. 301–310). https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.caadria.2011.301

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