Architects have their own language. They
speak about space in terms that seem arcane or even cabalistic to
nonpractitioners, delineating elusive concepts such as scale, proportion, and
balance with words like datum and enframement. Augmented
Reality’s potential for Architecture is huge. “AR” is any system that overlays
the real world with digital information that seemingly co-exists. We humans live in two worlds: the outer world of
appearances- all of the forms of things that captivate our eye and this second
world [that] is not so immediately captivating. First, walls are not merely walls, they are membranes or skins; sliding
doors are permeable boundaries, [which] can
draw on other senses to communicate elements of a scheme, such as the acoustics
within a space. But how these things
actually function, their anatomy or composition, the parts working together and
forming the whole [is] hidden from our view. The second world is harder to
understand. It is not something visible to the eye, but only to the mind that
glimpses the reality. This “how” of things is just as poetic; it contains the secret
of life, of how things move and change. With
AR, multiple users share the same physical space and perceive the ‘spatial
presence’ of a digital object, making it an ideal medium for collaborative
problem solving. Combining the “how” and the
“what” of architecture creates something infinitely more poetic, to stretch the
boundaries, to break the conventions of architecture [with] compromises in construction, no throwaway spaces, and
no arbitrary decisions.
Reference:
Architecture: Rus, Mayer. 2014. 'Perfect Harmony'. Architectural Digest. Accessed May 10 2014.
http://www.architecturaldigest.com/decor/2012-07/michael-lehrer-los-angeles-house-article.
Architectural
Computing: Abboud, Rana. 2014. 'Architecture In An
Age Of Augmented Reality'. ArchitectureAU.
Accessed May 11 2014.
http://architectureau.com/articles/architecture-in-an-age-of-augmented-reality/.
Engineering: Rosenfield, Karissa. 2013. 'How Santiago
Calatrava Blurred The Lines Between Architecture And Engineering To Make
Buildings Move'. ArchDaily. Accessed
May 10 2014. http://www.archdaily.com/321403/.
Credit: Photography by Roger Davies http://www.architecturaldigest.com/decor/2012-07/michael-lehrer-los-angeles-house-article |
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