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Digital Gehry : material resistance, digital construction / Bruce Lindsey ; preface by Antonino Saggio.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: IT revolution in architecturePublisher: Basel ; Boston : Birkhäuser, [2001]Copyright date: ©2001Description: 93 pages : illustrations (some colour), plans ; 19 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 3764365625
  • 9783764365622
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 720.92 21
LOC classification:
  • NA737.G44 L56 2001
Contents:
Flying Carpets; preface / Antonino Saggio -- 1. Drawings and Models -- 2. Gehry's Process BC (Before Computers). 2.1. Drawing. 2.2. Models. 2.3. Collaboration -- 3. Barcelona Fish: A Digital Collusion. 3.1. Hanover. 3.2. Bilbao -- 4. Gehry's Process: Digitally Adapted. 4.1. Building a Program. 4.2. Drawing and Gesture. 4.3. Drawing as Provocation. 4.4. Design Process Model: Building a Drawing. 4.5. Final Design Model. 4.6. Digitizing. 4.7. Closing the Form. 4.8. Rationalization/Legitimization -- 5. Digital (Information) Diversity. 5.1. Simulation. 5.2. Computer Aided Manufacturing. 5.3. C-cubed. 5.4. Master Model/Master Builder. A Fluent Practice.
Review: "Frank Owen Gehry opened an efficient architecture studio in 1962. But in 1978, almost all at once, he overthrew the canons of his daily professionalism for a new and audacious experimentation. Now, in 2001, his praise has become unanimous: dozens of constructions have followed one after the other on both sides of the Atlantic, some of them acclaimed as works that are symbols of contemporary architecture. This book focuses on Gehry's evolving design process, and how digital tools and processes have been adapted to global/collaborative/singular practice; a fluent practice. Lindsey describes the organization of Gehry's office and its associated teams, and outlines the role of digital tools in an emergent design and construction process where a renewed passion, desire, and collaboration is resulting in "a new architecture" and the reestablishment of the architect as "master builder". These work methods are placing the architect at the center of the construction activity and are changing the way that buildings will be made in the future."--BOOK JACKET.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 720.92 LIN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A413260B

Includes bibliographical references (pages 92-93).

Flying Carpets; preface / Antonino Saggio -- 1. Drawings and Models -- 2. Gehry's Process BC (Before Computers). 2.1. Drawing. 2.2. Models. 2.3. Collaboration -- 3. Barcelona Fish: A Digital Collusion. 3.1. Hanover. 3.2. Bilbao -- 4. Gehry's Process: Digitally Adapted. 4.1. Building a Program. 4.2. Drawing and Gesture. 4.3. Drawing as Provocation. 4.4. Design Process Model: Building a Drawing. 4.5. Final Design Model. 4.6. Digitizing. 4.7. Closing the Form. 4.8. Rationalization/Legitimization -- 5. Digital (Information) Diversity. 5.1. Simulation. 5.2. Computer Aided Manufacturing. 5.3. C-cubed. 5.4. Master Model/Master Builder. A Fluent Practice.

"Frank Owen Gehry opened an efficient architecture studio in 1962. But in 1978, almost all at once, he overthrew the canons of his daily professionalism for a new and audacious experimentation. Now, in 2001, his praise has become unanimous: dozens of constructions have followed one after the other on both sides of the Atlantic, some of them acclaimed as works that are symbols of contemporary architecture. This book focuses on Gehry's evolving design process, and how digital tools and processes have been adapted to global/collaborative/singular practice; a fluent practice. Lindsey describes the organization of Gehry's office and its associated teams, and outlines the role of digital tools in an emergent design and construction process where a renewed passion, desire, and collaboration is resulting in "a new architecture" and the reestablishment of the architect as "master builder". These work methods are placing the architect at the center of the construction activity and are changing the way that buildings will be made in the future."--BOOK JACKET.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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