Kinetics and Mechanical Motions
Kinetics and Mechanical Motions
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The following three exercises will build upon each other in and will make use
of the below:
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Physical Means of Actuation
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Kinetic Function
Kinetic function is used as a technological design strategy for building types that are
efficient in form, lightweight, and inherently flexible with respect to various contexts
and a diversity of purposes.
Such systems can be defined generally as buildings and/or building components with
variable mobility, location and/or geometry.
Although kinetic solutions in architecture have been around since the earliest
architecture in some form of another, the point here lies in understanding how such
systems can facilitate adaptability in terms of programmatic use, contextual and
environmental conditions and respond to them dynamically.
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Ways and Means
The ways in which a kinetic structural solution performs may include among others,
folding, sliding, expanding, and transforming in both size and shape.
The means by which a kinetic structural solution performs may be, among others,
pneumatic, chemical, magnetic, natural or mechanical.
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General Kinetic Typologies:
5 Basic Mechanisms:
Turning Joint
Sliding Joint
Rolling Joint
Roll-Slide Joint
Screw Mechanism
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Materiality
Materiality will also prove to be of great promise for advancement in the area of
interactive architecture as a result of technology providing both an unprecedented
vision into microscopic natural mechanisms and advanced manufacturing of high
quality kinetic parts with new materials such as fabrics, ceramics, polymers and gels,
fabrics, shape-memory alloy compounds and composites with unprecedented
structural properties.
Material Understanding:
“material architecture” john fernandez, architectural press
“transmaterial” – on website
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Mechanical Motions:
Stress: ex: Sleeping bag, light reflector for window, laundry basket
Folding: ex: clothes, parachutes tents etc…(rules but not memory)
Creasing: ex: maps, boxes (inherent memory)
Bellows: ex: lamp shade, shoe rack , airplane door extension (3-d
crease with space between)
Assembling: ex: broom handles with extensions, kit of parts (rules
for dis-assembly and re-assembly)
Hinging: ex: laptop, umbrella (hinge joint)
Rolling: ex: dog leash, garden hose, tape measure (rolling)
Sliding: ex: telescope, antennae, exacto knife (constrained slide)
Nesting: ex: crates, pots and pans (two or more occupying
overlapping space)
Inflation: ex: balloon, mattresses (constrained and hydraulic)
Fanning: ex: fans, allun Wrenches, paint samples (single
constraining point)
Pantograph: ex: scissor, shelving, lamp extensions (scissor) K
Tropisms
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Biomemetics
•Emulating biological design principles that can be utilized in an industrial
context
NOTE:
http://www.tumbletruss.com/
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Bionics:
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Interactive modeling:
•PHYSICAL MODELING OF MOTION
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Interactive modeling:
•PHYSICAL MODELING OF MOTION
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Interactive modeling:
•ADDING A MEANS OF ACTUATION
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Interactive modeling:
•ADDING SENSORS FOR RESPONSE
KPOND MOVIE
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Additional Readings:
Highly Recommended:
Chironis, Nicholas P.: Mechanisms and Mechanical Devices Sourcebook, McGraw Hill, (1996)
Chironis, Nicholas P.: Mechanisms, linkages, and mechanical controls. New York: McGraw-Hill, (1965)
Kronenburg, Robert: Transportable environments: theory, context, design, and technology: papers from the International
Conference on Portable Architecture, London, 1997, E & FN Spon, London (1998)
Robbin, Tony: Engineering a new architecture, Yale University Press, New Haven, CT (1996)
Brown, Henry T.: Five hundred and seven mechanical movements: embracing all those which are most important in
dynamics, hydraulics, hydrostatics, pneumatics, steam engines, mill and other gearing, presses, horology, and
miscellaneous machinery, and including many movements never before published and several which have only recently
come into use. 18th ed. New York: Brown & Seward, (1896)
Jones, Franklin Day: Ingenious Mechanisms for Designers and Inventors, Industrial Press (1977)
Tufte, Edward R.: Visual Explanations. Cheshire, Connecticut: Graphics Press (1997)
Davidson, Cynthia: Guy Nordenson, Chuck Hoberman, Mahadev Raman: Interview: Three Engineers (Sitting around
Talking) Any: Architecture New York, v10, Anyone Corp, New York, NY (1995)
Zuk, William: New Technologies: New Architecture. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York (1996)
Pawley, Martin: Theory and Design in the Second Machine Age Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, (1980)
Zuk, William: Kinetic Architecture. Van Nostrand Reinhold, New York (1970) K
Sort of Recommended:
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Walker, John R., Goodheart-Willcox, Machining Fundamentals: From Basic to Advanced Techniques (1997)
Zerning, John: Design Guide to Anticlastic Structures in Plastic. Polytechnic of Central London (1976)
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