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Clark Nexsen

Clark Nexsen

Virginia Beach, VA

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Clark Nexsen hosts Virginia Tech Center for Design Research exhibition exploring the impact of digital fabrications on architecture and education

By Eliza Vaughn
Mar 16, '15 5:22 PM EST

Advances in digital technology are creating an explosion of possibilities related to the basic building blocks of design: material and form, light, movement, and pattern. Virginia Tech student work featuring 3-D printing, robotics, and dynamic fenestration is currently on display in Clark Nexsen’s office and gallery space in Town Center, Virginia Beach.

Exhibition materials were developed with digital tools in an undergraduate studio called CRD – (trans)LAB at Virginia Tech’s School of Architecture and Design. Students from different disciplines explore how the advancement of technological and computational processes can challenge and inform the practice of architecture and design. The exhibition examines how architecture education should change in response to an environment where analog, mechanical, and electronic technologies are being replaced by rapidly emerging digital technologies.

Students participating in the exhibition include Laura Escobar, Ryan Hawkins, Brian Kato, David Kolodziej, Aaron Payne, Stephen Perry, Hannah Utter, and Dan Ventresca. David Clark, a research assistant professor, and Negar Kalantar, an architect and PhD student, directed the CRD – (trans)LAB studio. Nathan King, assistant professor, directed the robotics segment.

The Virginia Tech Center for Design Research, led by Director, Robert Dunay, FAIA, encourages students to collaborate and do research across disciplines to examine and push the boundaries of design and the framework of education.

Clark Nexsen has started a program of exhibitions and performances on the 14th floor of their new corporate headquarters. The digital fabrication exhibition opened on Feb. 4, 2015, and continues through Wednesday, March 18, 2015.  

“We wanted to create a space that would engage our employees and also promote design to the wider Hampton Roads academic and professional community,” said architect Paul Battaglia. “Our architects and engineers have been inspired by the innovative research and ideas from Virginia Tech students and the Center for Design Research in this exhibit.”

About the Center for Design Research at Virginia Tech College of Architecture and Urban Studies
The goal of the Center for Design Research is to exploit the untapped territories of opportunity that lie between disciplines and, in so doing, redefine the role of design education through research and expanded engagement with society.

About Clark Nexsen
Clark Nexsen is an award-winning architectural and engineering firm that is deeply committed to providing design excellence to U.S. and global clients. Founded in 1920, the firm is headquartered in Virginia Beach, Virginia, with 450 employees in office locations in Virginia, North Carolina, Georgia, Washington, D.C., and Texas. In 2014, Clark Nexsen was ranked in the Top 20 Architecture/Engineering firms in Building Design + Construction’s annual rankings and #5 on its Top Mid-Atlantic Firms list. For more information on the firm, visit www.clarknexsen.com or find them on Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn.

For more information, contact Cat Brutvan at 919-576-2100 or cbrutvan@clarknexsen.com.