Announcements

 
Augmented Spatiality-03-lowres

Since last year, I have been collaborating with some architects, textile designers and mechatronics engineers in RMIT to explore the nexus between robotics and kinetic architecture, responsive surface and skin, personal and public urban space.

An early fruit of this collaboration is the RMIT Learning and Teaching Investment Fund that we just recently won. The grant will be used to conduct a new multidisciplinary studio in RMIT Melbourne, Australia.

Augmented Spatiality: Retrofitting the Social City is the new design studio that will run in Semester 2, 2011. This will based on the past RAD-P elective that we run last year, but it will be more ambitious, designerly focused, with great design and technical support from PhD candidates in RMIT, who are doing research in various topics including kinetic architecture, elastic transformable skins, vision-based systems, mechatronics, new materials in architecture, and algorithmic design for parametric modelling.

We invite students from different programs, architecture, landscape architecture, interior design, industrial design, public arts, and textile design, to join the class. They will work in groups, drawing inspirations from utopian-future city ideas of the past (e.g. Smithsonian’s House of the Future, Cedric Price’s Fun Palace, etc) towards the design and a prototypical model of an urban intervention on a street or site in Melbourne.

It will be an intensive 9-weeks studio starting in a week time! I can’t wait!

 
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Przemek Jaworski and I are going to lead the workshop cluster “Interacting with the City” in SmartGeometry 2011 following the success of last year’s workshop cluster, Parametrics and Physical Interactions in SmartGeometry 2010, which produced interesting prototypes including: Bioclimactic skin,  TweetFormUrban simulation tableOccupant motion trackerRapid Coordination TableSpace Scanner, andResponsive Media Facade.

This year we will still do interactivity with physical and digital models, but mainly using tangible tables and Microsoft Kinect (a new controller for Xbox 360 which is not a controller at all, as everything is based on gestural interactions). Our cluster is one of the 10 clusters selected from 46 submissions (less than 25% acceptance rate).

Interacting with the City cluster in SmartGeometry 2011 aims to create tangible models of the city ‘in action’, using historical or real-time data. Using Web 2.0 technology, Processing, tangible interactions, projections, and digital modeling and fabrication, physical and digital models will be set up to enable visualisation and tangible interaction with the data. The use of data from Facebook, Twitter, Google Maps, and various data sources from cities and public websites will be investigated. The goal of the cluster is to explore a new kind of design collaboration informed by real world data.

The cluster will create a generic visual environment for interactive and collaborative design in which tangible and gestural interactions play an important role. The use of tangible tables, Microsoft Kinect sensor and projections in the workshop environment and out at the city streets will be explored. Outcomes may include graphical, digital and physical representations of data, models on tangible tables, 3D model of a building in a city informed by public data, and interactive installations.

UbiMash code library will also be utilized to plug into online data sources and manage data transfer between the interactive installations and 3D modelling.

Don’t miss out! Apply now! Applications to attend SmartGeometry 2011 Workshop will close on 31st January 2011.

As a reminder of the fun we had in 2010, watch this:

embedded by Embedded Video

vimeo Direkt

 
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This blog has been really quiet, as I have been away for trips in October-November and writing papers in November-December.

Sometime in the middle of November, I receive two awards which are quite a nice surprise!

In short these were my activities in the past few months:

      • 20-24 October 2010: Conference attendance and paper presentation at ACADIA 2010 held in the Great Hall, Cooper Union, New York. Hugo Mulder and I presented a paper written by the two of us and Przemek Jaworski about the outcomes of the Parametrics and Physical Interactions cluster we run earlier this year in SmartGeometry 2010. The paper is one of the 36 papers selected from 300 submissions.
      • 28-31 October 2010: Giving invited talks at the Digital Fabrication workshop and conference in University of Malaga, Spain.
      • 2-5 November 2010: Software development workshops at Brisbane for an ongoing ARC Linkage.
      • 12-22 November 2010: Annual leave in Jakarta! Staying @ my parents’ while having a restful break.
      • end of November – December: writing research papers and 3 weeks of summer teaching of FIT3128 at Monash in the evenings. Managed to be lead/co- authors of six full conference papers, three abstracts, and one journal article submitted during this period. My journal article submitted for ITCON a while ago was accepted for publication in January 2011. Yay!

      Sometime in the middle of November, I was selected as a recipient of these awards (thank God!):

      • IBM Smarter Planet Industry Skills Innovation Awards 2010 for the transdisciplinary project I’m leading:  ”Two Cities as a Living Lab: Project-based and research-led teaching of socio-technical pedagogical approaches in designing for the cities’ wicked problems”, with team members: Susu Nousala, Margaret Hamilton, Marsha Berry, and Jane Burry.
      • RMIT Ian Permezel Award 2010 for an Early Career Researcher to travel and present at an international conference.

      I was receiving my award in RMIT Teaching and Research Awards Event 2010.

      2010 has been a great year. Lots of writing, coding, publishing, travelling, failing, debugging, testing, and definitely lots of learning! It has been a year with a great learning curve and amazing experiences and I’m really grateful about it.

      I’ll get back on full steam of posting to the blogs after Christmas!

      <HolidayPeriodJournal>
      <MyChristmasTODOs>
      <plan>rest</plan>
      <plan>write papers and 2011 grants</plan>
      <plan>coding</plan>
      <plan>read my books by Zig Ziglar, Donald Knuth</plan>
      <plan>evaluate 2010</plan>
      <plan>plan for 2011</plan>
      <plan>sleep A LOT</plan>
      </MyChristmasTODOs>
      <ActualThingsDONE>
      <letsseehowitgoes/>
      </ActualThingsDONE>
      </HolidayPeriodJournal>

       

      SIAL COLLOQUIUM

      “Designing with (or without) Data: the Ephemeral, the Complex, and the Ubiquitous”

      Monday, 18th October 2010, 12:00 – 12:45pm, RMIT University Building 97 level 3, Room 02, 106-108 Victoria Street, Melbourne.

      Presenter: Dr. Flora Salim

      Data is ubiquitous due to the digitization of our world. Has this changed the way we design? As designers, what is the role of data in your design process and how do you treat different kinds of data?
      There is an unprecedented volume of data in our physical and socially networked world that can be used to inform our design problems and the way we design. How to utilise ubiquitous and ephemeral data in design?

      The push for interdisciplinary working in the built environment sector has been driven by the need to deliver innovative and collaborative practices in performance-based design. This has leveraged data complexity and managing various data representations from cross-disciplines is not trivial. How to deal with such level of complexity?

      Flora will present the projects she has been working on from the viewpoint of a data modeller and a software architect. She will present design projects that utilise UbiMash, an open source library that she initiated early this year for interaction with ubiquitous and ephemeral data. This will be presented in ACADIA 2010.
      She will also present her work-in-progress on designing an online parametric design tool for early stage performance-based design, which enables concurrent input from engineers. This is part of an ongoing ARC linkage project with QUT and Queensland Government’s Project Services on “Assimilation of architectural and services design in early design modelling”.

      About:
      Dr. Flora Salim is a Research Fellow at Spatial Information Architecture Laboratory (SIAL), RMIT University and an Honorary Research Associate of the Centre for Distributed Systems and Software Engineering, Monash University. She received her PhD from Monash University in 2009. She was a senior application developer with responsibilities to design and develop high-performance media servers in a number of broadcasting/TV stations worldwide, including Ch 7, TEN, CBS, TVNZ. She has initiated the development of an open source software platform for interoperability between parametric CAD applications and physical, haptic, sensor devices, and Web 2.0 API. Her research interests include context-aware computing, data modelling, sensing and adaptive systems, intelligent transportation systems, and urban informatics. As an early career researcher, she has published at least 15 international peer-reviewed conference papers and book chapters. She is the recipient of the 2010 Ian Permezel Award for her publication in the highly significant ACADIA 2010.

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