Digital chains in modern architecture

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Abstract

The “digital chain” is a continuous digital organization process, from the draft right into the manufacturing. Now one of these chains is applied on a mountain shelter. The individual steps are programmed and connected by universal interfaces. The computer is used not as passive digital drawing board, but as self-dependent tool that exerts influence on. Rules, dependence and aims, are formulated by the architect the computer can optimize due to its computing power. The role of the architect shifts thereby from the form designer to the role of a process designer. The aesthetics of the results is exciting and unusually, organically and self-evident-it is however always the result of given parameters. One topic is the complexity. The constructional modeling of the computers is a substantial support and easement. With programming techniques and parameterized construction, a high degree of individualizing becomes possible. A further point is efficiency. Construction with individual units, which former on was just realizable with high time and cost, become economically in this manner today. Furthermore computer-controlled machines work with precision and a detailing, which would be by workmanship neither temporally nor technically obtainable.

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APA

Dohmen, P., & Rüdenauer, K. (2007). Digital chains in modern architecture. In Proceedings of the International Conference on Education and Research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (pp. 801–804). Education and research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe. https://doi.org/10.52842/conf.ecaade.2007.801

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