View allAll Photos Tagged voronoi

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation Bibliotheca

 

A stunning new architectural installation commissioned for the first anniversary of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney creates a spectacular space for displaying catalogues and other publications.

The installation is an evolutionary display, which will adapt and grow in response to each new gallery project while creating an ephemeral and surreal experience with changing lights and effects.

Holding a selection of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation and Art & Australia publications in honeycomb shaped cells, the installation is backlit through transparent acrylic via energy efficient LED lights.

The installation showcases LAVA’s ongoing fascination with the efficiency and beauty of geometries in nature – the potential for naturally evolving systems for new building typologies and structures.

“The shape of the installation is based on a “voronoi”, or “bubble geometry”,.

Dr Gene Sherman, director of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation who commissioned the work said, “LAVA`s installation possesses an aesthetic that resonates throughout the gallery space while being surprisingly functional.”

 

The bookcase uses the latest digital fabrication and engineering techniques such as CNC milling and CAD CAM technology. LAVA maintained a “digital chain” throughout the design and production process, which has established offices in Sydney, Abu Dhabi and Stuttgart over the past 12 months.

 

Architects:

 

LAVA

Laboratory for Visionary Architecture

Chris Bosse, Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck

with Esan Rahmani, Jarrod Lamshed, Erik Escalante

 

72 Campbell Street

Surry Hills

Sydney NSW 2010

Australia

 

Phone: +61 2 92801475

  

www.l-a-v-a.net

directors@l-a-v-a.net

  

Client:

Gene Sherman

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

16–20 Goodhope Street, Paddington, Sydney NSW 2021 Australia

T: +61 (0)2 9331 1112 F: +61 (0)2 9331 1051 W: www.sherman-scaf.org.au

 

Photo credit: Chris Bosse, Peter Murphy,

 

Builder:

Definitive, Display by Design

Light : LED systems Australia

    

Really simple stuff: Voronoi or Delaunay plus brownian motion.

 

Made with Processing plus the excellent Mesh library by Lee Byron.

"Voronoi Nude Walking" @ Art Nation

Push Sim Under water

39 x 32 Steiner tree's 1248 prims forming an interactive Voronoi following you're avatar making the "Voronoi Nude Walking".

Size 2000 x 1000 x 750 mm, made from white powdercoated CNC-bent stainless steel and/or brass. Generated to user-drawn footprint and height, optimised for weight and stability.

Size 1000 x 1000 x 225 mm, made from white powdercoated CNC-bent stainless steel and/or brass. Generated to user-drawn footprint and height, optimised for weight and stability.

experiments with voronoi script

Voronoi analysis evaluating collection area of MRT stations, in sq.m. The size and shape of the cells shows the impact on access as the expansion of the MRT reconfigures a centralized, linear system into a nonhierarchical, gridded schema

Comparing LeCorbusier's Les trois Établissements Humains drawing with a mathematically generated voronoi skeleton using a modified version of Daniel Piker's Medial Axes Grasshopper definition.

Really simple stuff: Voronoi or Delaunay plus brownian motion.

 

Made with Processing plus the excellent Mesh library by Lee Byron.

site section showing relationship to Yerevan urban fabric

 

Lace Hill in Yerevan, Armenia by Forrest Fulton Architecture for International Business Center competition

 

forrestfulton.com/lace-hill-over-yerevan/

 

Lace Hill stitches the adjacent city and landscape together to support a holistic, ultra-green lifestyle, somewhere between rural hillside living and dense cultured urbanity. The 85,000 square meter (900,000 sf) proposal is a new model of development for Yerevan and Armenia that supports a resilient, high-value spatial fabric, dense with overlapping natural and urban phenomenon.

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation Bibliotheca

 

A stunning new architectural installation commissioned for the first anniversary of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney creates a spectacular space for displaying catalogues and other publications.

The installation is an evolutionary display, which will adapt and grow in response to each new gallery project while creating an ephemeral and surreal experience with changing lights and effects.

Holding a selection of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation and Art & Australia publications in honeycomb shaped cells, the installation is backlit through transparent acrylic via energy efficient LED lights.

The installation showcases LAVA’s ongoing fascination with the efficiency and beauty of geometries in nature – the potential for naturally evolving systems for new building typologies and structures.

“The shape of the installation is based on a “voronoi”, or “bubble geometry”,.

Dr Gene Sherman, director of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation who commissioned the work said, “LAVA`s installation possesses an aesthetic that resonates throughout the gallery space while being surprisingly functional.”

 

The bookcase uses the latest digital fabrication and engineering techniques such as CNC milling and CAD CAM technology. LAVA maintained a “digital chain” throughout the design and production process, which has established offices in Sydney, Abu Dhabi and Stuttgart over the past 12 months.

 

Architects:

 

LAVA

Laboratory for Visionary Architecture

Chris Bosse, Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck

with Esan Rahmani, Jarrod Lamshed, Erik Escalante

 

72 Campbell Street

Surry Hills

Sydney NSW 2010

Australia

 

Phone: +61 2 92801475

  

www.l-a-v-a.net

directors@l-a-v-a.net

  

Client:

Gene Sherman

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

16–20 Goodhope Street, Paddington, Sydney NSW 2021 Australia

T: +61 (0)2 9331 1112 F: +61 (0)2 9331 1051 W: www.sherman-scaf.org.au

 

Photo credit: Chris Bosse, Peter Murphy,

 

Builder:

Definitive, Display by Design

Light : LED systems Australia

    

“Cellular Tessellation” is an architectural installation that transforms your urban experience as a pedestrian. This softly glowing, geometric form responds to your movements, creating an ever-shifting space of patterned and immersive light.

 

The impact is both spatial and aesthetic—you can be “inside” the space of the pavilion, as well as experiencing the project visually. As you move through and around the pavilion, you can manipulate the lighting effects—watch how the intensity and colour of the illuminations change as you interact with “Cellular Tessellation”. The artwork “reads” the proximity and number of inhabitants inside the pavilion and feeds this information back to you by adjusting its light output. It’s as if the pavilion comes alive as more people flock inside.

 

“Cellular Tessellation” uses innovative, “computational form generation” techniques to create and resolve the shape and componentry of the pavilion. The geometry of the artwork is a complex surface comprising an organic array of cellular “Voronoi” shapes, cut from flat sheet materials, folded, and aggregated to create the pavilion.

 

The pavilion is CNC-cut from flat sheets of high density polyethylene—recycled plastic milk bottles. Each “cell” contains an array of LED lights, driven by Arduino micro-processors and motion sensors.

 

The artwork has been developed by a team of three design-driven academics from the Soheil Abedian School of Architecture of the Gold Coast’s Bond University, who have developed the project to research emerging possibilities in architectural form and construction.

 

Chris Knapp is an Assistant Professor in Digital Design and Discipline Leader of the Architecture Program at Bond University. Chris directs the architecture office, Built-Environment Practice, which investigates design at the intersection of technology and culture.

 

Jonathan Nelson is an Assistant Professor of Architecture in Digital Fabrication and founding manager of the Architecture Fabrication and Research Laboratory at Bond University.

 

Michael Parsons is a Teaching Assistant at Bond University and a Master of Architecture candidate in the program, where he also received the Bachelor of Architectural Studies degree.

"Voronoi Nude Walking" @ Nicolas Schöffer's Tower Reconstructed by Velazquez Bonetto aka László Ördögh Diabolus @ Diabolous Sim.

39 x 32 Steiner tree's 1248 prims forming an interactive Voronoi following you're avatar making the "Voronoi Nude Walking".

Scotland Voronoi partitioned by postcode, colored by the relative sizes of the polygons.

A small shift in approach with this one - a central spinal column now rather than a centred beginning.

 

Evolution of a theme and idea.

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation Bibliotheca

 

A stunning new architectural installation commissioned for the first anniversary of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney creates a spectacular space for displaying catalogues and other publications.

The installation is an evolutionary display, which will adapt and grow in response to each new gallery project while creating an ephemeral and surreal experience with changing lights and effects.

Holding a selection of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation and Art & Australia publications in honeycomb shaped cells, the installation is backlit through transparent acrylic via energy efficient LED lights.

The installation showcases LAVA’s ongoing fascination with the efficiency and beauty of geometries in nature – the potential for naturally evolving systems for new building typologies and structures.

“The shape of the installation is based on a “voronoi”, or “bubble geometry”,.

Dr Gene Sherman, director of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation who commissioned the work said, “LAVA`s installation possesses an aesthetic that resonates throughout the gallery space while being surprisingly functional.”

 

The bookcase uses the latest digital fabrication and engineering techniques such as CNC milling and CAD CAM technology. LAVA maintained a “digital chain” throughout the design and production process, which has established offices in Sydney, Abu Dhabi and Stuttgart over the past 12 months.

 

Architects:

 

LAVA

Laboratory for Visionary Architecture

Chris Bosse, Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck

with Esan Rahmani, Jarrod Lamshed, Erik Escalante

 

72 Campbell Street

Surry Hills

Sydney NSW 2010

Australia

 

Phone: +61 2 92801475

  

www.l-a-v-a.net

directors@l-a-v-a.net

  

Client:

Gene Sherman

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

16–20 Goodhope Street, Paddington, Sydney NSW 2021 Australia

T: +61 (0)2 9331 1112 F: +61 (0)2 9331 1051 W: www.sherman-scaf.org.au

 

Photo credit: Chris Bosse, Peter Murphy,

 

Builder:

Definitive, Display by Design

Light : LED systems Australia

    

Really simple stuff: Voronoi or Delaunay plus brownian motion.

 

Made with Processing plus the excellent Mesh library by Lee Byron.

This "Stone Fossil" seeks to capture a moment in time when a leaf or insect is captured in a brief embrace with the forming rock and they each imprint on each other.

 

This lace rock (NZ schist) is made from 100% cotton thread which has been crocheted into lace that seamlessly encapsulates the rock.

 

Each rock dictates the form of the lace as the tensions and curves pull the lace into a unique shape. There is a beautiful contrast of soft and hard, earth made and man made, nature and art.

 

Each rock/pebble is a unique one of a kind piece which can be used as a paperweight, outdoor tablecloth weight, wedding table decoration, centrepiece or gift. The smaller ones can be secreted in a pocket as a personal talisman.

 

They look great in random small collections either grouped in a loose display, or together in a stunning bowl.

Used poincare to create the path outline and Voronoi stippler to create the dots. Also did some additional magic in both Inkscape and GIMP. Sorry for the loud background, but for the life of me, I couldn't think of a good background. Click here for just the bubbles (on transparent background). :)

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation Bibliotheca

 

A stunning new architectural installation commissioned for the first anniversary of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney creates a spectacular space for displaying catalogues and other publications.

The installation is an evolutionary display, which will adapt and grow in response to each new gallery project while creating an ephemeral and surreal experience with changing lights and effects.

Holding a selection of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation and Art & Australia publications in honeycomb shaped cells, the installation is backlit through transparent acrylic via energy efficient LED lights.

The installation showcases LAVA’s ongoing fascination with the efficiency and beauty of geometries in nature – the potential for naturally evolving systems for new building typologies and structures.

“The shape of the installation is based on a “voronoi”, or “bubble geometry”,.

Dr Gene Sherman, director of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation who commissioned the work said, “LAVA`s installation possesses an aesthetic that resonates throughout the gallery space while being surprisingly functional.”

 

The bookcase uses the latest digital fabrication and engineering techniques such as CNC milling and CAD CAM technology. LAVA maintained a “digital chain” throughout the design and production process, which has established offices in Sydney, Abu Dhabi and Stuttgart over the past 12 months.

 

Architects:

 

LAVA

Laboratory for Visionary Architecture

Chris Bosse, Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck

with Esan Rahmani, Jarrod Lamshed, Erik Escalante

 

72 Campbell Street

Surry Hills

Sydney NSW 2010

Australia

 

Phone: +61 2 92801475

  

www.l-a-v-a.net

directors@l-a-v-a.net

  

Client:

Gene Sherman

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

16–20 Goodhope Street, Paddington, Sydney NSW 2021 Australia

T: +61 (0)2 9331 1112 F: +61 (0)2 9331 1051 W: www.sherman-scaf.org.au

 

Photo credit: Chris Bosse, Peter Murphy,

 

Builder:

Definitive, Display by Design

Light : LED systems Australia

    

Voronoi Bookshelf Generator written in Processing by Hero Design. Lear more at www.HeroDesign.com

Lace Hill in Yerevan, Armenia by Forrest Fulton Architecture for International Business Center competition

 

forrestfulton.com/lace-hill-over-yerevan

 

Lace Hill stitches the adjacent city and landscape together to support a holistic, ultra-green lifestyle, somewhere between rural hillside living and dense cultured urbanity. The 85,000 square meter (900,000 sf) proposal is a new model of development for Yerevan and Armenia that supports a resilient, high-value spatial fabric, dense with overlapping natural and urban phenomenon.

This is a behind-the-scenes visualization of my globemaker algorithm. Of course it is not a complete explanation.

 

The different coloured patches represent the individual Voronoi regions used to create this snowflake projection.

 

The black lines are not where the scissors would cut, but rather they represent the sort of "backbones" of the snowflake arms.

This "Stone Fossil" seeks to capture a moment in time when a leaf or insect is captured in a brief embrace with the forming rock and they each imprint on each other.

 

This lace rock (NZ schist) is made from 100% cotton thread which has been crocheted into lace that seamlessly encapsulates the rock.

 

Each rock dictates the form of the lace as the tensions and curves pull the lace into a unique shape. There is a beautiful contrast of soft and hard, earth made and man made, nature and art.

 

Each rock/pebble is a unique one of a kind piece which can be used as a paperweight, outdoor tablecloth weight, wedding table decoration, centrepiece or gift. The smaller ones can be secreted in a pocket as a personal talisman.

 

They look great in random small collections either grouped in a loose display, or together in a stunning bowl.

project 3d points to screen, use points index divided by number of points as HSB color, build voronoi diagram.

Experimenting with Alan Shaw's Voronoi & Delaunay triangulation library as3delaunay github.com/nodename/as3delaunay in research for a new project.

 

Watch this video on Vimeo. Video created by Paul Neave.

'voronoi flow' generative lampshade designed and 3d printed by parametric | art

using Gigamax3D filaments

parametric-art.com

gigamax3d.com

Lace Hill in Yerevan, Armenia by Forrest Fulton Architecture for International Business Center competition

 

forrestfulton.com/lace-hill-over-yerevan/

 

Lace Hill stitches the adjacent city and landscape together to support a holistic, ultra-green lifestyle, somewhere between rural hillside living and dense cultured urbanity. The 85,000 square meter (900,000 sf) proposal is a new model of development for Yerevan and Armenia that supports a resilient, high-value spatial fabric, dense with overlapping natural and urban phenomenon.

typical wall section

 

Lace Hill in Yerevan, Armenia by Forrest Fulton Architecture for International Business Center competition

 

forrestfulton.com/lace-hill-over-yerevan/

 

Lace Hill stitches the adjacent city and landscape together to support a holistic, ultra-green lifestyle, somewhere between rural hillside living and dense cultured urbanity. The 85,000 square meter (900,000 sf) proposal is a new model of development for Yerevan and Armenia that supports a resilient, high-value spatial fabric, dense with overlapping natural and urban phenomenon.

approach from tower-voids to promenade

 

Lace Hill in Yerevan, Armenia by Forrest Fulton Architecture for International Business Center competition

 

forrestfulton.com/lace-hill-over-yerevan

 

Lace Hill stitches the adjacent city and landscape together to support a holistic, ultra-green lifestyle, somewhere between rural hillside living and dense cultured urbanity. The 85,000 square meter (900,000 sf) proposal is a new model of development for Yerevan and Armenia that supports a resilient, high-value spatial fabric, dense with overlapping natural and urban phenomenon.

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation Bibliotheca

 

A stunning new architectural installation commissioned for the first anniversary of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney creates a spectacular space for displaying catalogues and other publications.

The installation is an evolutionary display, which will adapt and grow in response to each new gallery project while creating an ephemeral and surreal experience with changing lights and effects.

Holding a selection of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation and Art & Australia publications in honeycomb shaped cells, the installation is backlit through transparent acrylic via energy efficient LED lights.

The installation showcases LAVA’s ongoing fascination with the efficiency and beauty of geometries in nature – the potential for naturally evolving systems for new building typologies and structures.

“The shape of the installation is based on a “voronoi”, or “bubble geometry”,.

Dr Gene Sherman, director of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation who commissioned the work said, “LAVA`s installation possesses an aesthetic that resonates throughout the gallery space while being surprisingly functional.”

 

The bookcase uses the latest digital fabrication and engineering techniques such as CNC milling and CAD CAM technology. LAVA maintained a “digital chain” throughout the design and production process, which has established offices in Sydney, Abu Dhabi and Stuttgart over the past 12 months.

 

Architects:

 

LAVA

Laboratory for Visionary Architecture

Chris Bosse, Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck

with Esan Rahmani, Jarrod Lamshed, Erik Escalante

 

72 Campbell Street

Surry Hills

Sydney NSW 2010

Australia

 

Phone: +61 2 92801475

  

www.l-a-v-a.net

directors@l-a-v-a.net

  

Client:

Gene Sherman

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

16–20 Goodhope Street, Paddington, Sydney NSW 2021 Australia

T: +61 (0)2 9331 1112 F: +61 (0)2 9331 1051 W: www.sherman-scaf.org.au

 

Photo credit: Chris Bosse, Peter Murphy,

 

Builder:

Definitive, Display by Design

Light : LED systems Australia

    

More crocheted stone in my continuing series of working lace around New Zealand river stones and schist rocks.

Experimentation for the various density of lattice components. From series

of 1:10:1 to 30:1:30. Scripted in Rhino with variable piping logic...

Spatial quailty of the differentiated lattice looks quite different yet

structure performance is to be experiemented...

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation Bibliotheca

 

A stunning new architectural installation commissioned for the first anniversary of the Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation (SCAF) in Sydney creates a spectacular space for displaying catalogues and other publications.

The installation is an evolutionary display, which will adapt and grow in response to each new gallery project while creating an ephemeral and surreal experience with changing lights and effects.

Holding a selection of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation and Art & Australia publications in honeycomb shaped cells, the installation is backlit through transparent acrylic via energy efficient LED lights.

The installation showcases LAVA’s ongoing fascination with the efficiency and beauty of geometries in nature – the potential for naturally evolving systems for new building typologies and structures.

“The shape of the installation is based on a “voronoi”, or “bubble geometry”,.

Dr Gene Sherman, director of Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation who commissioned the work said, “LAVA`s installation possesses an aesthetic that resonates throughout the gallery space while being surprisingly functional.”

 

The bookcase uses the latest digital fabrication and engineering techniques such as CNC milling and CAD CAM technology. LAVA maintained a “digital chain” throughout the design and production process, which has established offices in Sydney, Abu Dhabi and Stuttgart over the past 12 months.

 

Architects:

 

LAVA

Laboratory for Visionary Architecture

Chris Bosse, Tobias Wallisser, Alexander Rieck

with Esan Rahmani, Jarrod Lamshed, Erik Escalante

 

72 Campbell Street

Surry Hills

Sydney NSW 2010

Australia

 

Phone: +61 2 92801475

  

www.l-a-v-a.net

directors@l-a-v-a.net

  

Client:

Gene Sherman

Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation

16–20 Goodhope Street, Paddington, Sydney NSW 2021 Australia

T: +61 (0)2 9331 1112 F: +61 (0)2 9331 1051 W: www.sherman-scaf.org.au

 

Photo credit: Chris Bosse, Peter Murphy,

 

Builder:

Definitive, Display by Design

Light : LED systems Australia

    

"Voronoi Nude Walking" @ Nicolas Schöffer's Tower Reconstructed by Velazquez Bonetto aka László Ördögh Diabolus @ Diabolous Sim.

39 x 32 Steiner tree's 1248 prims forming an interactive Voronoi following you're avatar making the "Voronoi Nude Walking".

future greenway

 

Lace Hill in Yerevan, Armenia by Forrest Fulton Architecture for International Business Center competition

 

forrestfulton.com/lace-hill-over-yerevan

 

Lace Hill stitches the adjacent city and landscape together to support a holistic, ultra-green lifestyle, somewhere between rural hillside living and dense cultured urbanity. The 85,000 square meter (900,000 sf) proposal is a new model of development for Yerevan and Armenia that supports a resilient, high-value spatial fabric, dense with overlapping natural and urban phenomenon.

1 2 ••• 13 14 16 18 19 ••• 65 66