Lines of Flight, Human is a large-scale architectural facade design completed for the new Minneapolis Public Service Building that examines the history of human migration to the region and its impacts on human and non-human life. The project employs a range of computational techniques to spatialize cultural data about human migration and dispossession in the design of a pattern that meets bird-safety standards for buildings. The work is situated within theoretical discussions of site-specificity, land acknowledgment, the politics of immigration, procedural art, and best practices for bird mortality reduction. The paper discusses the project as a case study in data spatialization by reviewing the design process, which employed custom algorithms to integrate data-driven and recursive workflows that integrate cultural data, communicative design, and bird-safe parameters. Discussion of the research reflects on the project’s implications for future design of communicative facades, the limitations and biases of data-driven design techniques, and the potential to expand these workflows to engage with other aspects of building performance.
CITATION STYLE
Kim, J., Marcus, A., & Reichert, M. (2023). Lines of Flight. In Hybrids and Haecceities - Proceedings of the 42nd Annual Conference of the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture, ACADIA 2022 (pp. 486–497). ACADIA. https://doi.org/10.1215/23289252-2399785
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