New Solids and Massive Forms
Material type: ArticlePublication details: Wiley 2019Description: Vol 89, Issue 5, 2019 : (38-45 p.)Online resources: In: Architectural designSummary: Digital manufacturing has facilitated opportunities of surface patterning and the fabrication of one‐off special building components, removing the constraints of standardisation in the construction industry. Winka Dubbeldam, Chair and Miller Professor of Architecture at PennDesign at the University of Pennsylvania, expresses her current interest in massive architectural objects, as opposed to minimal forms, that instead of being an agglomeration of orthogonal planes and straight lines, are full bodied and sometimes voluptuous.Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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E-Journal | Library, SPAB | E-Journals | v. 89(1-6) / Jan-Dec2019 | Available |
Digital manufacturing has facilitated opportunities of surface patterning and the fabrication of one‐off special building components, removing the constraints of standardisation in the construction industry. Winka Dubbeldam, Chair and Miller Professor of Architecture at PennDesign at the University of Pennsylvania, expresses her current interest in massive architectural objects, as opposed to minimal forms, that instead of being an agglomeration of orthogonal planes and straight lines, are full bodied and sometimes voluptuous.
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