Behavioural Surfaces is a thesis project in Architecture discussed on December 2010 at the University of Florence. The project explores the surface-space relationship in which a surface condition, generated from intensive datascapes derived from environmental data, is able to produce spatial differentiation and modulate structural and environmental preformance. Exploiting material self-organization in sea sponges as surfaces that deploy function and performance through curvature modulation and space definition, two different surface definition processes were explored to organize the system hierarchy and its performances at two different scales. At the macroscale, the global shape of the building is shaped on the base of isopotential surfaces while at a more detailed level the multi-performance skin system is defined upon the triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS).
Behavioral Surfaces / A. Erioli; T. Casucci. - STAMPA. - (2012), pp. 339-348.
Behavioral Surfaces
ERIOLI, ALESSIO;
2012
Abstract
Behavioural Surfaces is a thesis project in Architecture discussed on December 2010 at the University of Florence. The project explores the surface-space relationship in which a surface condition, generated from intensive datascapes derived from environmental data, is able to produce spatial differentiation and modulate structural and environmental preformance. Exploiting material self-organization in sea sponges as surfaces that deploy function and performance through curvature modulation and space definition, two different surface definition processes were explored to organize the system hierarchy and its performances at two different scales. At the macroscale, the global shape of the building is shaped on the base of isopotential surfaces while at a more detailed level the multi-performance skin system is defined upon the triply periodic minimal surfaces (TPMS).I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.