sábado, 31 de julio de 2010

#books #architecture | Elements of parametric design

Elements of parametric design / Robert Woodbury ; with contributions by Onur Yüce Gün, Brady Peters and Mehdi (Roham) Sheikholeslami.
London ; New York : Routledge, 2010 [07].
xi, 300 p. : il.

/ 28107 / EN / Libros / Dibujo arquitectónico / Diseño arquitectónico / Diseño asistido por ordenador

📘 Ed. impresa: ISBN 9780415779876
Cita APA-7: Woodbury, Robert F. (2010). Elements of parametric design. Routledge.
ehuBiblioteka BCG A-72:681.3 ELE
https://ehu.on.worldcat.org/oclc/916484801

[.en] Driven by new computer and digital fabrication tools, the architectural designs that are being built are pushing boundaries of form, customization and construction. Pushed by practices wanting and needing to produce novelty, computer-aided design systems are increasingly parametric – that is, they represent designs that change with their input data. Such systems give more control and capability to designers, but require much more comprehensive understanding if they are to be used effectively.

Mastering these ideas requires skill as designer, mathematician and computer scientist. This book teaches what new knowledge and skills designers need to master the parametric and how they can learn and use it. It demonstrates clearly how using patterns to think about and work with parametric modelling helps designers master the new complexity of the design systems.

Design is change. Parametric modeling represents change. It is an old idea, indeed one of the very first ideas in computer-aided design. In his 1963 PhD thesis, Ivan Sutherland was right in putting parametric change at the centre of the Sketchpad system, the first computer aided design (CAD) system. His invention of a representation that could adapt to changing context both created and foresaw one of the chief features of the CAD systems to come. The devices of the day prevented Sutherland from fully expressing what he might well have seen, that parametric representations could deeply transform design work itself. I believe that, today, the key to both using and making these systems lies in another, older idea.

People do design. Planning and implementing change in the world around us is one of the key things that make us human. Language is what we say; design and making is what we do. Computers are simply a new medium for this ancient enterprise. True, they are the first truly active medium. They are general symbol processors, almost limitless in the kind of tool that they can present. With much craft and care, we can program them to do much of what we call design. But not all. Designers continue to amaze us in with new function and form. Sometimes new work embodies wisdom, a precious commodity in a finite world. To the human enterprise of design, parametric systems bring fresh and needed new capabilities in adapting to context and contingency and exploring the possibilities inherent in an idea.

What is the new knowledge and skill designers need to master the parametric? How can we learn and use it? That is what this book is about. It aims to help designers realize the potential of the parameter in their work. It does so by combining basic ideas of parametric systems themselves with equally basic ideas from both geometry and computer programming.