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DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 1
SEAMLESS CONNECTION BETWEEN DIGITAL ANALYSIS METHODS AND
ROBOTIC FABRICATION
Shahram Arashzad
Heiarii LI CHENG
NewSchool Of Architecture And Design
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 2
It is inconceivable today to imagine designing buildings without the use of computers.
They are used at every step of the architectural process, from conceptual design to construction.
Three-dimensional modeling and visualization, generative form finding, scripted modulation
systems, structural and thermal analyses, project management and coordination, and file-to-
factory production are just some of the digital practices employed by architects and building
consultants. Digital fabrication is often one of the final stages of this process, and it is very much
what it sounds like: a way of making that uses digital data to control a fabrication process.
Falling under the umbrella of computer-aided design and manufacturing (CAD/CAM), it relies
on computer driven machine tools to build or cut parts.
BobCAD-CAM software illustration. Image courtesy of BobCAD-CAM.com
CAD/CAM has been a mainstay of industrial design and engineering and of
manufacturing industries—particularly the automotive and aerospace industries—for more than a
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 3
half century. Parts ranging from engine blocks to cell phones are designed and built using 3D-
computer-modeling software. Scaled models are made quickly, using rapid-prototyping
machines that turn out accurate physical models from the computerized data. Once the computer
model is refined and completed, the data are transferred to computer-controlled machines that
make full-scale parts and molds from a range of materials such as aluminum, steel, wood, and
plastics. This computerized process streamlines production— effectively blending upstream and
downstream processes that are typically compartmentalized, often eliminating intermediate steps
between design and final production. There is the potential for architecture also to move more
fluidly between design and construction. As Branko Kolarevic states, “This newfound ability to
generate construction information directly from design information, and not the complex curving
forms, is what defines the most profound aspect of much of the contemporary architecture.”
Architects have been drawing digitally for nearly thirty years. CAD programs have made two-
dimensional drawing efficient, easy to edit, and, with a little practice, simple to do. Yet for many
years, as the process of making drawings steadily shifted from being analog to digital, the design
of buildings did not really reflect the change. CAD replaced drawing with a parallel rule and lead
pointer, but buildings looked pretty much the same. This is perhaps not so surprising—one form
of two-dimensional representation simply replaced another. It took three-dimensional-computer
modeling and digital fabrication to energize design thinking and expand the boundaries of
architectural form and construction. In a relatively short period of time, a network of activities
has grown up around digital fabrication. Inventive methods have emerged from project specific
applications developed by a handful of architects and fabricators. This inventiveness has to do in
part with restructuring the very process of construction.
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 4
The work of Gehry Partners and its associated firm Gehry Technologies has played a
pivotal role in this regard. For them, digital integration was largely necessitated by the
complexity of the building geometries. Gehry’s office began using CAD/CAM processes in 1989
to develop and then test the constructability of a building system for the Disney Concert Hall. As
is usually the case in design, the process was iterative and nonlinear. Initially, physical models
were reverse-engineered using a digitizer to take coordinates off a model’s surface and import it
into a 3D digital environment. The design subsequently moved back and forth between physical
and digital surface models—physical models for aesthetics, digital models for “system fit.” For
this purpose Gehry’s office adapted software from the aerospace industry, CATIA (Computer
Aided Three Dimensional Interactive Application), to model the entire exterior of the concert
hall. At that time the skin was conceived as stone and glass, and the office successfully
produced cut-stone mock-ups, using tool paths for computer controlled milling machines derived
from digital surface models. In other words, the digital model was translated directly into
physical production by using digitally driven machines that essentially sculpted the stone surface
through the cutting away of material. This building method revealed that the complexities and
uniqueness of surface geometries did not significantly affect fabrication costs, and it is this
realization, that one can make a series of unique pieces with nearly the same effort as it requires
to mass-produce identical ones, that forms a significant aspect of the computer-aided
manufacturing that has since been exploited for design effect. In 2002, Gehry Partners created
Gehry Technologies to further develop Digital Project, a version of CATIA adapted and
specialized for the unique demands of complex architectural projects.
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 5
Gehry Technologies Design Basic 8 On Uncategorized Design Ideas 8. Image courtesy of Ghery
Technologies.
Digital Project integrates numerous aspects of the construction process, including
building codes, and mechanical, structural, and cost-criteria aspects. Gehry Technologies now
acts as a consultant to Gehry Partners, as well as to other architects, assisting with digital
construction and management. The company is revolutionary in that it expands the role of the
architect to include oversight of the building and construction-management process, much as it
was in the age of the master builder. In addition to Gehry’s, architectural offices such as Foster
& Partners, Nicholas Grimshaw, and Bernhard Franken are forging similar integrated project-
delivery methods for large, complex projects.
Nowadays, our cities have completely evolved to a point where it is unrecognizable and
extremely difficult to control, and this is why architectural practice and urban planners heavily
rely on digital analysis methods to simulate building performance and optimization. As a new
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 6
emergent software among others, Grasshopper, has been on the trend over the recent years.
Grasshopper as a parametric tool, is numerically or formula driven. As a result, you are not only
able to generate form with numbers, but you can distill out numerical data from the form you
have created, and has proven to be an analysis design tool asset in emergent architectural
practices. One of the most analyzed topics is surely the environment. With the unpredictable
change in climate in recent years, it is important to have a clear understanding of the issue and
how analysis tools can help designers tackle the matter. Among the most used design analysis
methods for the environment are Grasshopper’s plug-ins such as “honeybee“ and “ladybug”.
Ladybug is an open source environmental plugin for Grasshopper3D that helps architects and
engineers create an environmentally-conscious architectural design. Ladybug imports standard
EnergyPlus Weather files (.EPW) into Grasshopper and provides a variety of 3D interactive
graphics to support the decision-making process during the initial stages of design.
Ladybug. Image courtesy of Grasshopper3d.com
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 7
Honeybee connects Grasshopper3D to EnergyPlus, Radiance, Daysim and OpenStudio
for building energy and day lighting simulation. The Honeybee project intends to make many of
the features of these simulation tools available in a parametric way.
Honeybee. Image courtesy of Grasshopper3d.com
However, an important aspect, if not the most important in the architectural and
construction world is fabrication. The translation between the architectural design and the
subsequent actualization process is mediated by various tools and techniques. Through the
adoption in architectural design practice of computation and information technologies, with their
capacity for a relatively seamless transition between design and fabrication, a more integrated
workflow across the design and actualization process is made more accessible to designers. In
recent years, designers have become increasingly able to move effortlessly between digital
modeling, performance simulation, and physical realization. As technology evolves, this rapidly
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 8
evolving field continually presents architects and designers with new challenges and
opportunities for creative exploration as well as a more materially intelligent practice. And this is
where robots come into actions.
Over the past decades, robots have made possible to radically enrich the physical nature
of architecture, to inform material processes and to merge computational design and constructive
realization as a symbol feature of architecture in the digital age, leading to the emergence of a
phenomenon described a few years ago as “digital materiality”.
Robotic research facility, Architecture and Digital Fabrication, ETH Zurich, 2005. Image
courtesy of Gramazio and Kohler Architects.
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 9
Firms such as ETH Zurich and the Future Cities Laboratory (FCL) at the Singapore ETH-
Centre for Global Environmental Sustainability (SEC), is heavily anchored in this voyage of
discovery, and explores what happens if architecture absorbs the proposed connection, enabled
by robots, between computational logic and material realization as a new basis for the
discipline’s practices. It is essential that architecture and the conditions specific to its production
inform our approach to robotic fabrication, and not vice versa. Industrial robots are distinguished
by their versatility. Like computers, they are suitable for a wide variety of tasks because they are
generic and therefore not programed to any particular application. Instead of being restricted in
their operations to a prescribed range of applications, the manual agility of robots can be freely
designed and programmed. Their material manipulation skills can be customized to suit a
specific constructive intention, both at the material and conceptual levels. It is precisely this
quality, unleashing a previously unimaginable range of freedom in the interplay between the
machine and the object that distinguishes the operational applicability of industrial robots from
all other specialized digital fabrication machines. In order to exploit this potential, which
massively expands the concept of architectural design, not only a technical grasp of the robot’s
construction capabilities, but also an in-depth understanding of the materials to be processed, is
necessary. Robotic fabrication overcomes the repetitive build-up of standard building elements in
favor of a differentiated assembly of custom-built elements, and links computational design to
the fabrication of physical study models. Robots offer a reliable and cost-effective technology
that is globally accessible and extremely flexible in its application. Although analysis methods
and robotic fabrication seams effortless, a key component of the design process are physical
models (made by robots). Not only physical models sharpen the key concepts of the design, they
also immediately communicate the relationship between material and structure, space, and
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 10
proportions. Therefore, physical models are a critical tool in conjunction with computational
design, whereby robotic technology is used for its fabrication.
ETH Singapore fabrication models. Image courtesy of the Future Cities Laboratory (FCL) at the
Singapore ETH-Centre for Global Environmental Sustainability (SEC).
One of the most recent case studies is probably the Gantenbein winery, 2006, Switzerland,
by Gramazio and Kohler. The project was originally designed by Bearth & Deplazes Architects,
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 11
and it was already under construction when Gramazio and Kohler were invited to design its
façade. The initial design proposed a simple concrete skeleton filled with bricks: The masonry
acts as a temperature buffer, as well filtering the sunlight for the fermentation room behind it.
The bricks are offset so that daylight penetrates the hall through the gaps between the bricks.
Direct sunlight, which would have a detrimental effect on the fermentation, is however excluded.
Polycarbonate panels are mounted inside to protect against wind.
Interior. Image courtesy of Gramazio and Kohler + Bearth and Deplazes Architekten.
The robotic production method that was developed at the ETH enabled the architects to lay each
one of the 20,000 bricks precisely according to programmed parameters—at the desired angle
and at the exact prescribed intervals. This allowed to design and constructs each wall to possess
the desired light and air permeability, while creating a pattern that covers the entire building
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 12
façades. According to the angle at which they are set, the individual bricks each reflect light
differently and thus take on different degrees of lightness. Similarly to pixels on a computer
screen they add up to a distinctive image and thus communicate the identity of the vineyard. In
contrast to a two-dimensional screen, however, there is a dramatic play between plasticity, depth
and color, dependent on the viewer’s position and the angle of the sun.
Exterior façade. Image courtesy of Gramazio and Kohler + Bearth and Deplazes Architekten.
The wall elements were manufactured as a pilot project at the ETH Zurich, transported by lorry
to the construction site, and installed using a crane. Because construction was already quite
advanced, Gramazio and Kohler only had three months before assembly on site. This made
manufacturing the 72 façade elements a challenge both technologically and in terms of deadlines.
As the robot could be driven directly by the design data, without our having to produce
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 13
additional implementation drawings, we were able to work on the design of the façade up to the
very last minute before starting production.
Architectural design practice will be increasingly mediated by digital technology in the
future. Digital fabrication technology allows architects to conceive designs both digitally and
physically, and may empower them to take a more active role in materialization and construction
process where connection between digital analysis methods and robotic fabrication is seamless.
DESIGN AND FABRICATION METHODS 14
References
BobCAD-CAM software illustration. Image courtesy of http://BobCAD-CAM.com
Gehry Technologies Design Basic 8 On Uncategorized Design Ideas 8. Image courtesy of
Ghery Technologies.
Ladybug. Image courtesy of http://Grasshopper3d.com
Honeybee. Image courtesy of http://Grasshopper3d.com
Robotic research facility, Architecture and Digital Fabrication, ETH Zurich, 2005. Image
courtesy of Gramazio and Kohler Architects.
ETH Singapore fabrication models. Image courtesy of the Future Cities Laboratory
(FCL) at the Singapore ETH-Centre for Global Environmental Sustainability (SEC).
Interior. Image courtesy of Gramazio and Kohler + Bearth and Deplazes Architekten.
Exterior façade. Image courtesy of Gramazio and Kohler + Bearth and Deplazes
Architekten.
Gramazio, F., & Kohler, M. (2014). Made by Robots Challenging Architecture at the
Large Scale AD. (p. 18). Hoboken: Wiley.
Iwamoto, L. (2009). Digital fabrications: Architectural and material techniques (p. 144).
New York: Princeton Architectural Press.
Kolarevic, B. (2008). Manufacturing material effects: Rethinking design and making in
architecture. New York: Routledge.
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