Visions of Process—Swarm Intelligence and Swarm Robotics in Architectural Design and Construction

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in SammelwerkenForschungbegutachtet

Standard

Visions of Process—Swarm Intelligence and Swarm Robotics in Architectural Design and Construction. / Vehlken, Sebastian.
Robotic Building. Hrsg. / Henriette Bier. Springer, 2018. S. 1-23 (Adaptive Environments; Band 1, Nr. 1).

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in SammelwerkenForschungbegutachtet

Harvard

Vehlken, S 2018, Visions of Process—Swarm Intelligence and Swarm Robotics in Architectural Design and Construction. in H Bier (Hrsg.), Robotic Building. Adaptive Environments, Nr. 1, Bd. 1, Springer, S. 1-23. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-70866-9_1

APA

Vehlken, S. (2018). Visions of Process—Swarm Intelligence and Swarm Robotics in Architectural Design and Construction. In H. Bier (Hrsg.), Robotic Building (S. 1-23). (Adaptive Environments; Band 1, Nr. 1). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-70866-9_1

Vancouver

Vehlken S. Visions of Process—Swarm Intelligence and Swarm Robotics in Architectural Design and Construction. in Bier H, Hrsg., Robotic Building. Springer. 2018. S. 1-23. (Adaptive Environments; 1). doi: 10.1007/978-3-319-70866-9_1

Bibtex

@inbook{03d4049344394527905e7aa949eaae25,
title = "Visions of Process—Swarm Intelligence and Swarm Robotics in Architectural Design and Construction",
abstract = "This chapter discusses and reviews the application of swarm intelligence (SI) and swarm robotics (SR) to architecture and construction from a history of science and technology perspective. In a first step, it explores the conceptual entanglements of swarm intelligence and adaptive environments and situates them in the context of a recent theoretical discourse about “media ecologies”. The second part provides a critical overview of seminal SI approaches for architectural design. These scrutinize novel connections between architecture as a site of material composition and as a site of spatial practices by computer experiments in software environments. Its guiding hypothesis is that SI technologies here are primarily used to create diversity. Subsequently, the third part of the chapter examines in which ways recent advances in collective robotics lead to further materializations of the adaptive capabilities of swarming that go beyond software applications. It presents three state-of-the-art examples of SR for architectural construction and demonstrates that SR in architectural construction—in contrast to the paradigm of diversity discussed in the context of architectural design—work best in context with a high degree of standardization and pre-defined modularization, or, on the basis of regularity.",
keywords = "Media and communication studies, Swarm intelligence, Swarm robotics, Multi-agent design, Adaptive building, Distributed construction, Media ecology, Environmentality",
author = "Sebastian Vehlken",
year = "2018",
month = aug,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-319-70866-9_1",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-319-70865-2",
series = "Adaptive Environments",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "1",
pages = "1--23",
editor = "Henriette Bier",
booktitle = "Robotic Building",
address = "Germany",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Visions of Process—Swarm Intelligence and Swarm Robotics in Architectural Design and Construction

AU - Vehlken, Sebastian

PY - 2018/8/30

Y1 - 2018/8/30

N2 - This chapter discusses and reviews the application of swarm intelligence (SI) and swarm robotics (SR) to architecture and construction from a history of science and technology perspective. In a first step, it explores the conceptual entanglements of swarm intelligence and adaptive environments and situates them in the context of a recent theoretical discourse about “media ecologies”. The second part provides a critical overview of seminal SI approaches for architectural design. These scrutinize novel connections between architecture as a site of material composition and as a site of spatial practices by computer experiments in software environments. Its guiding hypothesis is that SI technologies here are primarily used to create diversity. Subsequently, the third part of the chapter examines in which ways recent advances in collective robotics lead to further materializations of the adaptive capabilities of swarming that go beyond software applications. It presents three state-of-the-art examples of SR for architectural construction and demonstrates that SR in architectural construction—in contrast to the paradigm of diversity discussed in the context of architectural design—work best in context with a high degree of standardization and pre-defined modularization, or, on the basis of regularity.

AB - This chapter discusses and reviews the application of swarm intelligence (SI) and swarm robotics (SR) to architecture and construction from a history of science and technology perspective. In a first step, it explores the conceptual entanglements of swarm intelligence and adaptive environments and situates them in the context of a recent theoretical discourse about “media ecologies”. The second part provides a critical overview of seminal SI approaches for architectural design. These scrutinize novel connections between architecture as a site of material composition and as a site of spatial practices by computer experiments in software environments. Its guiding hypothesis is that SI technologies here are primarily used to create diversity. Subsequently, the third part of the chapter examines in which ways recent advances in collective robotics lead to further materializations of the adaptive capabilities of swarming that go beyond software applications. It presents three state-of-the-art examples of SR for architectural construction and demonstrates that SR in architectural construction—in contrast to the paradigm of diversity discussed in the context of architectural design—work best in context with a high degree of standardization and pre-defined modularization, or, on the basis of regularity.

KW - Media and communication studies

KW - Swarm intelligence

KW - Swarm robotics

KW - Multi-agent design

KW - Adaptive building

KW - Distributed construction

KW - Media ecology

KW - Environmentality

UR - https://www.springerprofessional.de/robotic-building/16064966

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-319-70866-9_1

DO - 10.1007/978-3-319-70866-9_1

M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-3-319-70865-2

T3 - Adaptive Environments

SP - 1

EP - 23

BT - Robotic Building

A2 - Bier, Henriette

PB - Springer

ER -

DOI

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