Category Archives: Drew Carson

3D-Printing l Group-5

The aim of the exercise was to design and fabricate one part of a 5 meter long vertical installation with the use of a 3d-printing machine. The design was started by making a point cloud within the given bounding cylinder. Then the connections were made keeping in mind both the given points and the new points. All these connecting lines were converted into tubes but in order to make more organic in nature as inspired from a tree T-spline (a plugin for rhino) was used. Therefore, the final structure is more continuous, smooth and coherent in nature.

Drew Carson                     Priyanka Narula                    Taruni Aggarwal

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Group 04 | Tactile Tectonics

Tactile Tectonics

Senses provide humans a framework to observe and under- stand the world around us. In understanding the human’s approach to experience through the senses we found our cnc milling strategy. One sense that we wanted to utilize with our cnc milling strategy is touch. One can recognize the importance of touch as a sense when visiting historical sculptures. One notices highly polished areas where thousands, if not millions, of hands have felt the metal of these sculptures slowly changing the material into a highly burnished surface.

Wanting to provide a similar experience with our brick proposal, we accelerated the process with bringing together a high-tech and low-tech tooling methods. With the combination of cnc milling and hand planing we have created a brick that appears to have been set out in a popular city square and thousands of tourists have run their hands over the undulating surface.

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Group 04 | Bri-can-puz

Bri(ck)Can(vas)Puz(zle)

We understood that each group hoped to create an original proposition so we chose to create a brick that could embody this originality itself and become an canvas for each group to create their own creations within. The canvas-brick had to behave like a brick; so it had to retain the stack-ability, ease of construc- tion, and overall simple overall design. The brick itself takes a very simple form. We didn’t want to re-invent the brick; we just wanted to manipulate it a little bit to create a better linkage system. The overall design enforces a linked wall system that would be two components deep, five high, and an undetermined length. This size would facilitate a bar like installation that would, with the outdoor location, attract the student population of IAAC.

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Group 4 – Competition – cnc;molding;brick

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