Via Creative Applications
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FABRICATE is an International Peer Reviewed Conference with supporting publication and exhibition to be held at The Bartlett School of Architecture in London from 15-16 April 2011. Discussing the progressive integration of digital design with manufacturing processes, FABRICATE will bring together pioneers in design and making within architecture, construction, engineering, manufacturing, materials technology and computation.
Part of the exhibition is the work of ScanLAB, a research group run by Matthew Shaw and William Trossell at the Bartlett School of Architecture that explores the potential role of 3D scanning in Architecture, Design and Making. In 2010, 48 hours of scanning produced 64 scans of the Slade school’s entire exhibition space. These have been compiled to form a complete 3D replica of the temporary show which has been distilled into a navigable animation and a series of ‘standard’ architectural drawings.
The work becomes a confused collage of hours of delicately created lines and forms set within a feature prefect representation of the exhibition space. Sometimes a model or image stands out as identifiable, more often a sketch merges into a model and an exhibition stand creating a blurred hybrid of designs and authors. These drawings represent the closest record to an as built drawing set for the entire exhibition and an ‘as was’ representation of the Bartlett’s year.
The 3D model was produced using a Faro Photon 120 laser scanner ($40k). Software that enables navigation is Pointools, generic point cloud model software that allows for some of the largest point cloud models – multi-billion point datasets.
For more information on FABRICATE, see http://www.fabricate2011.org
Exhibition Private View
6pm – 14th April 2011
Bartlett School of Architecture Gallery
Wates House, 22 Gordon Street
London WC1H 0QB
For tickets, see fabricate2011.org/registration/
(Thanks Ruairi)
See also Fragments of time and space recorded with Kinect+SLR on NYC Subway … and CITY OF HOLES on bldgblog
Personal comment:
Usually not a big fan of realistic 3d architecture, but I find quite interesting (camera movements excepted...) this "in between reality" of an uncompleted or imperfert scan. Like if the architecture was half appearing, or halp disappearing in an "in between time zone".