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Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL

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Research

Dazzle Prosthesis, Camouflaging from Gait Recognition

July 18, 2015 |

Camouflage” as “the act of hiding anything from your enemy” first appeared in British print media on May 25, 1917, exported from the French during the First World War (Behrens, 2002). In biology, it is an adaptive coloration which is … Read More

What the augmented plant thinks about its domestication

July 17, 2015 |

Well, nothing really. The fact that plants lack a brain means that they are unable to take part in such a dialogue. If they did, they would undoubtedly want to have control over external factors like animals do. Probably they … Read More

Visual Motion Perception in Projected Space

July 16, 2015 |

1. THE ROLE OF VISUAL MOTION PERCEPTION.

Visual motion perception plays an important role and meaning in experiencing a space through a process describing how identification can be made by a visual system in order to transfer 2-D information to … Read More

Notating the spatiotemporal

July 15, 2015 |

What might be the value of notation as choreographic method in dance? In the search for a new choreographic work, conventional notation suggests a requirement for tracing an unstable segment with a time frame onto a stable and frozen two-dimensional … Read More

Lab Field Trip 2015

July 14, 2015 |

The IALab this year visited China beginning in the northern sub-zero temperatures of Beijing and ending almost a month later in the tropical warmth of Hong Kong. On our travels the Lab visited many cities and historical sites as well … Read More

When Architecture goes Beyond

July 14, 2015 |

It has long been recognized that architects work to fulfil functional and aesthetic requirements in the production of space, as stated by Vitruvius in his “Ten Books on Architecture”. In so doing, it is widely accepted that architecture exists as a … Read More

Positioning Participation

July 13, 2015 |

Knowing where you are is not a problem for humans since our solutions to this problem range from relying on our basic senses of sights, sounds and smells to using sophisticated technologies, such as GPS. Nevertheless, how can robots know … Read More

Proprioception Interaction: Upgrade Human Perception with Prothesis

July 10, 2015 |

Proprioception is the sense sensing positions and movements of neighboring parts of the human body. It relies on the proprioceptors in human muscle skeleton system and skin. Etymologically, the world Proprioception is from Latin “proprius”, meaning “one’s own self” and … Read More

(Foreword) Interactive Architecture: Adaptive World

July 6, 2015 |

Foreword written by Ruairi Glynn in July 2015. This is a pre-edited version.

Looking through the work in this book, I am immediately struck by how much has changed in the landscape of interactive architecture over the past five years. … Read More

The Augmentation of Plants

May 20, 2015 |

Plants intuitively collect information about their surroundings. Much like humans, animals and machines, they have electrical signals travelling inside them, but no nerves. Still, they naturally react to changes in luminous intensity, osmotic pressure, temperature, cutting, mechanical stimulation, water availability and wounding; but … Read More

Cycloïd-E: A Revolution from Industrial Robot to Sound Installation

May 16, 2015 |

Under the name of Cod.Act, André and Michel Décosterd combine their know-how and develop artistic productions. André Décosterd is a musician and Michel Décosterd is an architect. Working together, their works have reflections on sound, light and vision, and the … Read More

The ‘Double’ in Bellmer’s Dolls

May 7, 2015 |

Hans Bellmer is a German-born Surrealist artist and writer best known for the dolls he created around the ’30s. Besides the provocative nature of his work, he is considered as one of most controversial artists of the 20th century. His … Read More

The Generator Project

May 6, 2015 | | 2 Comments

Cedric Price’s proposal for the Gilman Corporation was a series of relocatable structures on a permanent grid of foundation pads on a site in Florida. Cedric Price asked John and Julia Frazer to work as computer consultants for this project. … Read More

Measuring Architecture with Dance Choreography

May 6, 2015 |

Could the intention of a dance be measurable? Through my notation research in architecture and dance choreography at IALab, tools that architects and choreographers gradually developed through their collaborative activities provided new words for dance choreography with architectural … Read More

Haptic-Sensitive Instrument – Jonathan Sparks

May 5, 2015 |

Jonathan Sparks is an artist living in Brooklyn, NY. His work combines computer programing, fabrication, electronics and multimedia.

Vibraille is his early exploration into the possibilities of adding haptic feedback into the mobile devices that usually rely heavily on the … Read More

Ghost Pole Propagator : A Timeless Petroglyphic Animation

May 5, 2015 |

When entering a historical castle, one may not expect to see a series of moving stick-figures on the wall. This is what Golan Levin created on the wall of Belsay Hall Castle, Newcastle, United Kingdom in 2007. The interactive installation … Read More

The Geodesic Sphere as an Exoskeleton of Life

May 4, 2015 |

‘The Geodesic Sphere as an Exoskeleton of Life’ is a hybrid of academic research and physical fabrication, embedded by technologies that promote controlled-dynamic behaviours in both micro and macro scales structures. The idea of Earth as the entire overarching vessel … Read More

Behnaz Farahi

May 3, 2015 |

Behnaz Farahi is an interaction designer, architect, Annenberg Fellow and PhD candidate in Interdisciplinary Media Arts and Practice at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, where she is exploring the potential of interactive systems using advanced computational technologies.  She is … Read More