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Talks and Poster Presentations (with Proceedings-Entry):

B. Martens, W.M. Tschuppik:
"Exploring the Design and Fabrication of Inflatables: "The Taming of the Shrew"";
Talk: ACADIA-conference (Association of CAD in Architecture), Louisville; 10-12-2006 - 10-15-2006; in: "Synthetic Landscapes - ACADIA 2006 International Conference Proceedings", G. Luhan, Ph. Anzalone et al. (ed.); Bookmasters, Inc., Mansfield, OH 44905 (2006), ISBN: 0-9789463-0-8; 461 - 470.



English abstract:
The building materials that help designers or architects achieve their goal of defining and enclosing space are usually concrete, steel, glass or wood. For these materials designers have both empirical data gained from experience and at times complex calculation methods enabling them to use them in their designs in a tangible, reckonable and, consequently, almost risk-free manner. It seems obvious that creating a design with well-known building materials will lead to more or less predictable outcomes. This is a good reason for investigating a design process dealing with air-filled building-elements. Architectural structures look completely different when one employs a "building material" which has been subjected to neither detailed investigations nor sophisticated calculations. The "Smart_Air" Design Studio was devised to take a closer look at the unusual building material "air", which we have only just begun to explore, and to make it the centre of a focused design exercise. The objective was to use "air", or, rather, pneumatic technologies, to arrive at structurally sound solutions for enclosing space, which could be considered to be a "roof" in the widest sense of the term.


Online library catalogue of the TU Vienna:
http://aleph.ub.tuwien.ac.at/F?base=tuw01&func=find-c&ccl_term=AC06585347

Electronic version of the publication:
http://publik.tuwien.ac.at/files/pub-ar_6740.pdf


Created from the Publication Database of the Vienna University of Technology.