45°45'04N 11°54'48E
45°51'17N 11°52'53E
45°26'22N 10°59'17E
43°49'54N 11°09'25E
43°46'42N 11°15'35E
45°01'57N 07°40'02E

and much much more...

Fresh Back from our Road Trip

Posted on

November 6, 2010



Looking forward to checking this at the V&A.




"FABRICATE is an International Peer Reviewed Conference with supporting publication and exhibition to be held at The Building Centre in London from 15-16 April 2011. Discussing the progressive integration of digital design with manufacturing processes, and its impact on design and making in the 21st century, FABRICATE will bring together pioneers in design and making within architecture, construction, engineering, manufacturing, materials technology and computation.

Discussion on key themes will include: how digital fabrication technologies are enabling new creative and construction opportunities, the difficult gap that exists between digital modeling and its realization, material performance and manipulation, off-site and on-site construction, interdisciplinary education, economic and sustainable contexts."

Plenty more info here: http://www.fabricate2011.org/

Fabricate Conference

Posted on

October 3, 2010

How far can material limits be pushed? Here a crazy guy in France has built a working boat out of chocolate..

Chocolate boat

Posted on

September 27, 2010


Should be worth a check, from 8th September 2010. [cheers A]

Eadweard Muybridge at Tate Britain

Posted on

August 31, 2010

Category


Summer reading? Tom McCarthy writes about representation of the machine in literature...

Blake to Ballard

Posted on

July 24, 2010

The Architectural Review selected Unit 23 as one of its top ten london architecture units.

Unit 23 article here.



Some fresh making by Orawee Choedamphai

Dimensional Textiles

Posted on

June 15, 2010


"Airborne lasers have "stripped" away thick rain forests to reveal new images of an ancient Maya metropolis that's far bigger than anyone had thought."
Click here to read more

Hidden Cities

Posted on

May 31, 2010



"an excavation in the non retinal order of architecture"; incredible archive of projects by James Cathcart, Frank Fantauzzi and Terence Van Elslander..

Iceberg Project

Posted on

May 7, 2010

They always say its never great to do welding in a hurry, but just sometimes you have to..

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/americas/8659398.stm

Posted on

May 4, 2010

Kid-printer

Posted on

May 2, 2010



Comparison of 3D scanning technologies from the perspective of conservators of the Naum Gabo collection at the Tate (Spiral Theme, 1941 shown above).
The sculptures posed difficulties being reflective and complex, which meant that haptic means were necessary in addition to laser scanning and photogrammetry. Such documentation allows the rapidly degrading sculptures to be reverse-engineered into a kit of parts which allow their recreation or restoration.

Scanning Gabo

Posted on

March 23, 2010



Informative slideshow about practicing stonemasons. Back to the old school...

edit: (23.03.10) Modern Britain, it seems, is not much fussed about the skills and knowledge that exist only in the minds, eyes and hands of people who make things – our living vernacular heritage - further reading from the Guardian again.

edit: (31.03.10) Handmade shoes - and again.

edit: (08.05.10) stonemasonry versus office work - guess where...

Disappearing Acts: Stonemasonry

Posted on

March 11, 2010

The work of Henrik Menné Reminds me a little of Anish Kapoor's Waxy canon