Sunday, March 25, 2012

Technology references


3D printing technologies

Printing buildings, including the first printed house

Molecular Assemblers and Nanotechnology

Real-time portable 3D scanning

Scanning the world

Replicating the world

more to follow

Design and Technology Brief

This is my current brief for the project, including the technology drivers. The first part of the text was adapted from the dissertation.



Spit&Bang: A Return to the Past in the Age of Three-Dimensional Mechanical Reproduction


The inevitability of progress implies that we are often asked to make a choice between saving the old and creating the new. Nevertheless, there is an evident contradiction today, in many urban environments of the developed world, that we search for uniqueness and relish authenticity when, simultaneously, we allow the erasure of historical places and buildings within our cities. More recently however, we are increasingly inclined towards the simulation of an idealized image of the past to its minutest details, exaggerating even elements of shabbiness and decay.


Spit&Bang draws attention to the implications of hyperreality in the built environment, and how it contributes to the amplification of a sentimentalist production of physical memories of our past, exploring how the reliance of technology in conjunction with the misinterpretation of reality and its simulation can only result in the loss of our referential past, and trigger a desperate attempt to reassert the feeling of this same reality, which is being lost.


May in this process the Truman Brewery be reinvented as itself, the Petticoat Lane Market as a shopping Arcade, the Old Bishopsgate Station as a new Transport Museum, the Brick Lane Market as an old Market Hall or the old Hospital of St. Mary Without as a new NHS centre built upon its ruins, which never existed?

Current three-dimensional scanning and printing technology allows us to replicate any object in nearly instant speed. In addition video capability in mobile phones is being converted into portable three-dimensional scanners, and in every corner of the world are sprouting three-dimensional printers that can increasingly replicate any three-dimensional sample with incredible precision.


Similarly to the advent of photography in the 19th century we are entering a new age of three-dimensional replication and soon we will be able to use the three-dimensional medium of reproduction in our everyday lives. For architects and designers this may now represent a new age of copyrights and lawsuits over illegal sampling of their products and buildings, but for the typical citizen it may mean that it can now use, own and produce any physical commodity ever wished for.


Already buildings are being three-dimensionally printed and soon the benefits of nanotechnology will be brought into the process, integrating the power of microscopic physical properties with our ability to build any physical form. Large budget constructions will likely have full-size custom molecular assemblers installed on site, manufacturing a building in one go; however, conventional construction sites can integrate molecular assembly machines in smaller scale, allowing building parts to be efficiently designed, fabricated and assembled on site, and adapting design details to local characteristics, labour skills and availability of tools. Performance and design characteristics of these parts, such as structural and insulation properties or architectural finishes, can be instantly modified and compiled as the building is assembled.


However, as we fear the advance of technology and a further loss of the sense of reality, can our panic to simulate an idealized image of the past in combination with our ability to replicate any physical object, result in an ambiguity of references and styles which only makes reference to itself and can only further reinforce our loss of both the past and reality? Can Spit&Bang become a replication of itself, appropriating physical elements from a local database of scanned three-dimensional samples, amalgamated into advanced building technology?

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Guide/Map to Spit! & Bang! work in progress


This is the real version of the sketch posted previously. Buildings will be on it for tomorrow's tutorial.

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Wall content for next crit 28/03


The current intention is to present as a minimum the boards sketched above. The ones on the left are mainly related to the film and to the design brief/site. The boards on the right are individual boards for each of the projects/interventions, giving a general view, description and technical issues/details - these will then form integral part of the technical report.

Spit! & Bang! Chronogram


Chronogram for final film. Images from storyboard included in the drawing. The idea is to produce the film using the 6/7 projects outlined in the Guide to Spit&Bang - beginning by showing details and ending with a fast pace unveiling the site and the cityscape.

Spit! & Bang! Storyboard


Storyboard for final film. Details to follow on Chronogram. This sets up the images that will be produced for the final portfolio & film.

Guilt-free Guide to Spit! & Bang!


The project will be composed of a series of small projects/interventions. Final drawing and details to follow.