ABSTRACT

Builders of the Vision traces the intellectual history and contemporary practices of Computer-Aided Design (CAD) and Numerical Control since the years following World War II until today. Drawing from primary archival and ethnographic sources, it identifies and documents the crucial ideas shaping digital design technologies since the first numerical control and CAD systems were developed under US Air Force research contracts at MIT between 1949 and 1970: the cybernetic theorization of design as a human-machine endeavor; the vision of computers as "perfect slaves" taking care of the drudgery of physical labor; the techno-social utopias of computers as vehicles of democracy and social change; the entrepreneurial urge towards design and construction integration; and the managerial ideologies enabling today’s transnational geographies of practice.

Examining the contrasting, and often conflicting, sensibilities that converge into CAD and BIM discourses - globalism, utopianism, entrepreneurialism, and architects’ desires for aesthetic liberation - Builders of the Vision shows that software systems and numerically controlled machines are not merely "instruments," or "tools," but rather versatile metaphors reconfiguring conceptions of design, materiality, work, and what it means to be creative. Crucially, by revealing software systems as socio-technical infrastructures that mediate the production of our built environments, author Daniel Cardoso Llach builds a strong case for the fields of architecture, media, and science and technology studies to critically engage with both the politics and the poetics of technology in design.

Builders of the Vision will be essential reading for scholars and practitioners across disciplines interested in the increasingly complex socio-technical systems that go into imagining and building of our artifacts, buildings, and cities.

chapter 1|11 pages

Introduction

Seeing Software as a Cultural Infrastructure

chapter 2|17 pages

Codification before Software

Architectural Inscriptions and the Design–Construction Split

part I|76 pages

Design Machines

chapter 3|18 pages

Software Comes to Matter

Encoding Geometry, Materials, and Machines

chapter 4|24 pages

Perfect Slaves and Cooperative Partners

Steven A. Coons and Computers' New Role in Design

chapter 5|12 pages

Computer-Aided Revolutions

CAD Experimentalism, Participation, and Representation in the Architecture Machine

chapter 6|20 pages

Visions of Design

Software Stories about Design, Creativity, and Control

part II|43 pages

Software from the Field

chapter 7|14 pages

The Architect's Bargain

Building the “Bilbao Effect” in the Abu Dhabi Desert

chapter 8|14 pages

Contesting the Infrastructure

Resistance against and Re-Appropriation of a Digital Model

chapter 9|14 pages

Rethinking Redundancy

Parametrics of Trust Building in Digital Practice