Difference between revisions of "project11:Frontpage"

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'''The Robotics Consortium''' ''will host an array of Robotic workshops and research laboratoria, dissipating into separate working cells and converging into a so called ground zero where composite/hybrid robotic fabrication processes will be developed through the combined effort of multiple specialists. Visitors of the World Expo will simultaneously learn and to a certain extend interact within the exhibition areas. How the roboticists and visitors interact with each other, allowing for gradients of public and private spaces, is determined by how the pavilion deals with its transitions ranging from fully open to fully enclosed spaces.''
'''The Robotics Consortium''' ''will host an array of Robotic workshops and research laboratoria, dissipating into separate working cells and converging into a so called ground zero where composite/hybrid robotic fabrication processes will be developed through the combined effort of multiple specialists. Visitors of the World Expo will simultaneously learn and to a certain extend interact within the exhibition areas. How the roboticists and visitors interact with each other, allowing for gradients of public and private spaces, is determined by how the pavilion deals with its transitions ranging from fully open to fully enclosed spaces.''      
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Revision as of 02:59, 11 November 2015


Ralph Cloot P1 Project Banner 1.jpg


The Robotics Consortium

We live in an era were the basic manufacturing conditions of architecture start to shift from manual work to digital fabrication. By using industrial robots combined with computational and algorithmic design systems, new ways of design thinking in architecture can lead to more informed buildings with a higher material efficiency, optimized structures, re-used materials, a minimal energy manufacturing process and in general turn mass production into mass customization, effectively replacing costly existing manufacturing processes of identical elements. The leading research groups and institutes all over the world are tackling several topics regarding robotic production, one challenge at a time, in which we can distinguish between additive, subtractive, formative and to a lesser extend immaterial robotic fabrication processes.

The upcoming Rotterdam World Exposition 2025 offers a unique opportunity to create a platform of collaborating and sharing between the world's leading researchers regarding this topic and for the visitors of the World Expo to learn more about the state-of-the-art of robotics in architecture. Within a theme of collaboration, several specialists within the field of architectural design to robotic fabrication will be brought together under one international pavilion to generate and share ideas, research results and technological developments for the purpose of advancing the discourse surrounding robotic fabrication in architecture. The ultimate goal being to create a design and fabrication process combining additive, subtractive (, immaterial) and formative techniques, culminating in the development of composite or hybrid processes.

Keywords: Collaborating, Networking, Research, Development, Design to Robotic Production, Prototyping, Roboticist Flow, Visitor Flow, Hybrid Processes

Ralph Cloot


Ralph Cloot Main Robotics In Architecture.jpg

Ralph Cloot Main Sci Arc Robot House.jpg

Ralph Cloot Main Robotic Extrusion.jpg

Ralph Cloot Main SuperFLEX Behavioral Bending.jpg

Ralph Cloot Main Fiber Syntax.jpg

Ralph Cloot Main Phase Change.jpg

Ralph Cloot Main Scalable Porosity.jpg

Ralph Cloot Main Miscellaneous Robotics.jpg

The Robotics Consortium will host an array of Robotic workshops and research laboratoria, dissipating into separate working cells and converging into a so called ground zero where composite/hybrid robotic fabrication processes will be developed through the combined effort of multiple specialists. Visitors of the World Expo will simultaneously learn and to a certain extend interact within the exhibition areas. How the roboticists and visitors interact with each other, allowing for gradients of public and private spaces, is determined by how the pavilion deals with its transitions ranging from fully open to fully enclosed spaces.


Ralph Cloot Main Architectural Transitions.jpg