Prototype for a New American Home

Ngai Vertical Studio. Fall 2007

Prototype for a New American Home Ngai Vertical Studio. Fall 2007 Bushey, Devin Student projects Student drawings Prototypes Model houses Buying a home is no longer about providing a lifestyle for our families, but a game of trade. Houses are built to maximize the number of rooms and size of garage because those are first things appraisers evaluate. Space has become a commodity. Rooms are given definitions and names, square footages are filled with redundant purposes and intentions, boundaries are secured and defended, in order to give space a value. The whole, the idea of home, the sanctuary, is therefore fragmented into parts that can no longer be reconstituted. The goal will be to re-invent a value system for the American home, to rethink the role of economy and its relationship to ourselves, our cities, and our environment, density, communication and transportation technologies, construction and fabrication advancements…etc back into its core, such that the system can co-evolve and adapt. Experimenting with an approach called Parametric Regionalism. Through the use of new 3D modeling tools, architects have been able to understand space not as defined by Cartesian points, but as a series of folded and unfolded topological surfaces. Architectural elements such as windows, doors, walls, floors, and no longer discrete elements but can now be related as topological variations on a single surface. Since these variations exist in the same topological space, they can also be described cohesively in algebraic form. The advantage of algebraic geometry is its ability to translate external date to the 2-manifold space of the architecture. Parametric Regionalism is then an approach that seeks for unique local properties and converges them into the architecture’s topological space, making variations purposeful to its locale. School of Architecture. (Troy, NY: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 2007) Ngai, Ted. Faculty advisor 2007 Digital images JPEG2000 21st century Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY

Prototype for a New American Home

Ngai Vertical Studio. Fall 2007

Bushey, Devin

Student projects

Student drawings

Prototypes

Model houses

Buying a home is no longer about providing a lifestyle for our families, but a game of trade. Houses are built to maximize the number of rooms and size of garage because those are first things appraisers evaluate. Space has become a commodity. Rooms are given definitions and names, square footages are filled with redundant purposes and intentions, boundaries are secured and defended, in order to give space a value. The whole, the idea of home, the sanctuary, is therefore fragmented into parts that can no longer be reconstituted. The goal will be to re-invent a value system for the American home, to rethink the role of economy and its relationship to ourselves, our cities, and our environment, density, communication and transportation technologies, construction and fabrication advancements…etc back into its core, such that the system can co-evolve and adapt. Experimenting with an approach called Parametric Regionalism. Through the use of new 3D modeling tools, architects have been able to understand space not as defined by Cartesian points, but as a series of folded and unfolded topological surfaces. Architectural elements such as windows, doors, walls, floors, and no longer discrete elements but can now be related as topological variations on a single surface. Since these variations exist in the same topological space, they can also be described cohesively in algebraic form. The advantage of algebraic geometry is its ability to translate external date to the 2-manifold space of the architecture. Parametric Regionalism is then an approach that seeks for unique local properties and converges them into the architecture’s topological space, making variations purposeful to its locale.

School of Architecture. (Troy, NY: Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 2007)

Ngai, Ted. Faculty advisor

2007

Digital images

JPEG2000

21st century

Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, NY