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Tim Durfee Studio

Tim Durfee Studio

Los Angeles, CA

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photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
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The Rather Large Array by Tim Durfee, amp

This 50' x 50' suspended building-sized scanner was fabricated to both present and record the exhibition MADE UP: Design's Fictions (curated by Tim Durfee with Haelim Paek) in the Wind Tunnel: a gallery hosted by the graduate Media Design Practices (MDP) program at Art Center College of Design.

The structure explores a possible future for architecture where sensors, cameras and other digital technologies are so central to the functioning of our cities that they become one and the same with the physical architecture. As visitors view the work in the gallery, the structure periodically scans the space with its 24 cameras. The images are then compiled and plotted onto the exhibition guide, producing a "live" catalog of the exhibition (one in which visitors often find themselves among the work.)

The installation is comprised of 256 thermally-formed PVC pods of 3 strands each: 1 for data, 1 for power, and 1 for structure. The designers worked with Buro Happold to engineer a one metric tonne suspended wooden beam which itself supports 14 video displays.  While the purpose and technology of the RLA are utterly different than its inspiration - the famous Very Large Array, constructed in the 1970's in New Mexico - the underlying principles are similar. Unlike the VLA and other landmarks of Big Science, however, The Rather Large Array uses only modest hardware store components: inexpensive microcontrollers, cameras, and lights. The construction approach allowed for nearly all of the material to be reused: few of the fourteen 20'-0" Douglas Fir beams were cut and could be reused; the steel rigging materials were rented for the installation period, and since no holes compromised the integrity of the 768 PVC pipes, they could be donated to a non-profit housing organization and urban gardening project.

MADE UP and The Rather Large Array were produced by amp (Architecture/Media Programs), an ongoing project studio founded by Tim Durfee that uses design as a mode of investigation, experimentation, and research on annual themes. 

 
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Status: Built
Location: Pasadena, CA, US
Firm Role: Principal
Additional Credits: Wind Tunnel Gallery, Media Design Practices (MDP), Art Center College of Design, Pasadena, CA

Installation by: Tim Durfee, amp
Project team: Haila Adamo, Haelim Paek, Laura Goard, Nicholas Paradowski, Fallon James

Production, coordination: Kevin Wingate
Engineering: Buro Happold
Graphic Design: Brian Roettinger
Cameras, LEDs, Lighting, Programming: Ewan Branda; Phil Van Allen, Dan Weinreber, Angelo Luchi
Steel fabrication: Etelberto Duenez

Additional assistance by: Rob Ball, Ji Su Choi, Jeremy Eichenbaum, Aurelia Friedland, Justin Gier, Link Huang, Dee Kim, Matthew Kizu, Hae Jin Lee, Mike Manalo, Matthew Manos, Jason McCann Joshua Moratto, Salvador Orara, Francisco Osorio, Rubina Ramchandani, Iris Anna Regn, Brandon Shigeta, Bora Shin, Jayne Vidheecharoen, Zhengxin Xi

 
photograph by Taiyo Watanabe
photograph by Taiyo Watanabe
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Yukie Takeshi
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Joshua White
photograph by Ed Valfre
photograph by Ed Valfre
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure
photograph by Catherine Wygal & Deanna McClure