Hacking design: novelty and diachronic emergence.

Date

2012-07

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

ISSN

1326-4826
1755-0475

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Type

Article

Peer reviewed

Yes

Abstract

The concept of emergence has had a significant effect on architectural theory, instigating a paradigmatic change in design and affecting the way buildings are perceived. In practice the practicalities of building procurement to satisfy necessity renders engagement with the concept largely academic. Otherwise, the physical properties of a building tend to limit engagement with emergence at the synchronic level. In this paper we consider how we might engage with the creative capacity of emergence at the diachronic level. As an artificial system a building may be perceived at different scales. Through computation we can conceive a systemic whole, which we may hack to explore the spatio-temporal capacities of the system, bending and leveraging behaviour in order to discover new tendencies of space and form.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Ireland, T. and Zaroukas, E. (2012) Hacking design: novelty and diachronic emergence. Architectural Theory Review, Vol 17, Iss 1, Special Issue: Emergence and Architecture, pp. 140-157.

Rights

Research Institute