New Machine Vernacular: Remote Building Devices, Digital/Cultural Accommodation, And Technology’s Renewed Humanitarian Agenda
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Date
2010-12
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Faculty of Architecture University of Moratuwa
Abstract
Contemporary advancements in mobile technologies and computer-aided fabrication systems have signaled the plausibility of remote construction devices in our near future. Semi-autonomous building-making machines capable of quickly (and continuously) erecting housing, architecturally dependent micro economies, and emergency urbanisms, represent our enormous technological potential to better the lives of an estimated 33 million people currently living in I.D.P. status around the world. In addition to homes and livelihoods, Tectonic Machines, as digital-mechanical extensions of our human sensibilities with regards to building, might also address the cultural and communal alienation of camp-bound I.D.P.s through extreme accommodation in producing vernacular forms and building types. In fact, the success of these humanitarian-centric machines will not be measured through an accounting of their industrial efficiency, but by their variable capabilities towards recreating aesthetically relevant replacement communities to carry functioning cultural systems and temporary economies, rather than mere logistics-based holding camps. These new machine's sensing, “informed", communicative, and freed from subjugation to the assembly line, must be devised to communally design  and deliver a great variety of architectural forms that are environmentally fit, culturally accommodating, and spontaneously familiar (not  necessarily  new),  in their  appropriateness. In this scenario of techno-environmental mediation,  a whole range  of future vernaculars might  evolve and develop as a comingling  of old traditions and state-of-the-art machineries, local materials  and global technologies, community-generated instinct and experienced formal  practices. In addition to these topics, this paper  will report on  the  development  of   a   specific Tectonic Machine currently  being designed for use in humanitarian relief situations and of the essential role vernacular accommodation plays in that  development. This project  has evolved from a digitally controlled casting  system  into something with the character and capabilities  of a robotic collaborator or construction probe  that  learns,  informs,  and  evolves  design  and construction   in    dialogue/partnership   with architects and displaced  communities
