Hello, I am currently in my 2nd semester now, and I am curious about books that teach about the design process, and other stuffs relating to that. Would be appreciating your recommendations! Thank you
CandS
Jun 15, 18 5:36 pm
Just go buy that Ingels guys books and do whatever is in those - you'll be just like your classmates in no time!
zonker
Jun 15, 18 5:57 pm
CandS
it's what I did - that and game design processes - it works - no oversophisticated intellectual stuff
Sperticus
Jun 16, 18 9:15 pm
Revealing Architectural Design by Phillip Plowright.
zonker
Jun 16, 18 10:27 pm
Balkins
Many game design concepts are based on 3D diagramming and events - events that determine program and form - many of these ideas can be found in Bernard Tschumi's event cities - Vol 1-4, he uses cinema, which in turn influenced game design - try and Google "the gameification of architecture" it's an interesting blog - also TU Delft, really did a lot in this area also
zonker
Jun 16, 18 10:34 pm
Also Iannis Xenakis was in many ways the first to do what we refer to today as computational design - if he was alive today, he would be writing Python, and C# code for Dynamo
To find out more about this, go to SFDUG Dynamo to see the latest in computational design presentations
nabrU
Jun 16, 18 10:36 pm
That area of work will be the first to be automated.
randomised
Jun 17, 18 12:09 am
No Iannis wouldn't, he would be in rocking it out with Thom Yorke and Ryoji Ikeda.
randomised
Jun 18, 18 9:01 am
Alva Noto when doing a boiler room set perhaps ;)
Wilma Buttfit
Jun 16, 18 10:43 pm
Find and follow the golden thread. Not a book. Saved you some time.
zonker
Jun 16, 18 11:45 pm
Samuel Sharpe - Done - there are already a number of firms that have automated the Concept through SD process - It all been reduced some Dynamo and Grasshopper scripts - Thomson Thomasetti is developing AI to do many architectural tasks - code analysis of projects, ADA, stair and egress design, structural
In learning Dynamo so that Dynamo won't make me redundant - got bills to pay
zonker
Jun 16, 18 11:58 pm
When I was in architecture school, one of my professors showed us the PLOT Bjarke Ingels website "this is it guys, do this"
It's really a 3D animated sequence of project morphology - Bjarke oversimplifies the process, makes it look easier than it really is - But it's a damn good way to articulate the design process and eliminates a lot of busy work that adds confusion
archinine
Jun 17, 18 12:56 pm
Coffee
Draw things
Crumple up drawing and toss against wall
Bang head against wall
Coffee
Draw things slightly better than before
Repeat above until occupancy (or crit/publishing etc for those paper arch academics), less head banging after sd, but not necessarily none...
Hello, I am currently in my 2nd semester now, and I am curious about books that teach about the design process, and other stuffs relating to that. Would be appreciating your recommendations! Thank you
Just go buy that Ingels guys books and do whatever is in those - you'll be just like your classmates in no time!
CandS
it's what I did - that and game design processes - it works - no oversophisticated intellectual stuff
Revealing Architectural Design by Phillip Plowright.
Balkins
Many game design concepts are based on 3D diagramming and events - events that determine program and form - many of these ideas can be found in Bernard Tschumi's event cities - Vol 1-4, he uses cinema, which in turn influenced game design - try and Google "the gameification of architecture" it's an interesting blog - also TU Delft, really did a lot in this area also
Also Iannis Xenakis was in many ways the first to do what we refer to today as computational design - if he was alive today, he would be writing Python, and C# code for Dynamo
To find out more about this, go to SFDUG Dynamo to see the latest in computational design presentations
That area of work will be the first to be automated.
No Iannis wouldn't, he would be in rocking it out with Thom Yorke and Ryoji Ikeda.
Alva Noto when doing a boiler room set perhaps ;)
Find and follow the golden thread. Not a book. Saved you some time.
Samuel Sharpe - Done - there are already a number of firms that have automated the Concept through SD process - It all been reduced some Dynamo and Grasshopper scripts - Thomson Thomasetti is developing AI to do many architectural tasks - code analysis of projects, ADA, stair and egress design, structural
In learning Dynamo so that Dynamo won't make me redundant - got bills to pay
When I was in architecture school, one of my professors showed us the PLOT Bjarke Ingels website "this is it guys, do this"
It's really a 3D animated sequence of project morphology - Bjarke oversimplifies the process, makes it look easier than it really is - But it's a damn good way to articulate the design process and eliminates a lot of busy work that adds confusion
Coffee
Draw things
Crumple up drawing and toss against wall
Bang head against wall
Coffee
Draw things slightly better than before
Repeat above until occupancy (or crit/publishing etc for those paper arch academics), less head banging after sd, but not necessarily none...
Coffee is on an exponential curve.