ABSTRACT

Contemporary Architecture and the Digital Design Process introduces the reader to new developments in the computer modelling of design form in contemporary architectural practice through a series of detailed case studies. The book illustrates how evolving design practices use and exploit the potential of new computing technologies in a wide range of areas and application.

A central thesis of this book is that technology follows design demand, rather than design adjusting to available new technology. Designers are not merely passive recipients of prescribed computing tools and techniques. Instead, they are increasingly able to express their intuitive design ideas through the rational medium of computing.
The book features several contemporary building projects, each of which introduces a range of CAD and computing issues based upon the work of creative architectural and engineering design practices. These include the offices of Frank O. Gehry, Peter Cook and Colin Fournier, Anthony Hunt Associates, Peter Hubner, Szyskowitz-Kowalski, and Faulkner Brown. All these examples show what architects need to know and the skills they need to acquire to use advanced CAD technology.

part I|109 pages

Digital Technology

chapter 1|31 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|11 pages

Simple Visualisation of Complex Forms

chapter 3|11 pages

Pure Form: Solidifying Mathematics

chapter 4|27 pages

Parametric Form: Variations on a Theme

part II|155 pages

Digital Practice

chapter 7|47 pages

Visionary Integration: This Blessed Plot

chapter 9|9 pages

Conclusions