IntCDC Constructive Conversations //
The Harvested, Designed and Living

June 10, 2021

Martin Tamke (CITA)
IntCDC Event

Time: June 10, 2021
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In the IntCDC Constructive Conversations, the Cluster of Excellence “Integrative Computational Design and Construction for Architecture” hosts renowned national and international scientists to speak on current topics and challenges in the field of IntCDC.

We are very happy to present Martin Tamke, Associate Professor at the Centre for Information Technology and Architecture (CITA) in Copenhagen. In his lecture The harvested, designed and living he will present emerging issues and research at CITA in relation to the shift of paradigm towards bio-based and circular practices in architecture and construction. We present ongoing research projects that explore the impact and challenges of this shift on material, technological and cultural levels. 

 

The harvested, designed and living

Martin Tamke, Associate Professor at the Centre for Information Technology and Architecture (CITA) in Copenhagen
10 June 2021   |   6:00 p.m.

 

 

Martin Tamke is Associate Professor at the Centre for Information Technology and Architecture (CITA) in Copenhagen. He pursues a design-led research on the interface and implications of computational design and its materialisation. He joined the newly founded research centre CITA in 2006 and has shaped its design-based research practice. Projects on new design and fabrication tools for wood and composite production have resulted in a series of digitally fabricated demonstrators that explore an architectural practice engaged with bespoke materials and behaviour.

His latest research focuses on computational strategies and models for the transition from the current systems of representation in design to those that can serve the requirements of a future eco-metabolistic building practice based on biomaterials. His current work is characterised by strong interdisciplinary links to computer science, with a focus on machine learning and 3D sensing; structural engineering, with a focus on simulation and ultralight hybrid structures; and materials science, with ongoing projects on bespoke materials in glulam, cellulose-based bioplastics and computational knitting. His research connects academic and industrial partners and has led to several national and European research projects, exhibitions and large-scale demonstrators, most recently the 2018 Isoropia project, as large-scale contribution to the Danish Pavilion at the Venice Biennale. In 2019, Martin has been appointed alternate reporter for the scientific track of the UIA2023 Copenhagen World Congress of Architects, honoring his engagement in sustainable architecture. He is currently involved in the Danish funded 4-year research project Predicting Response, the EU project Exskallerate and several industrial collaborations.

 

If you are interested in attending this online lecture, please send an email to event@intcdc.uni-stuttgart.de.

 

 

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