Unmaking Architecture from New York

Demolition and re-use materials management tool

Unmaking Architecture from New York

Demolition and re-use materials management tool

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Glass. Holding Patterns provide a destination for material that would otherwise be trashed.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Speculative tower constructed from concrete rectangles. Each object is a different size and has been located in place through the use of an AI method that finds optimal arrangements of irregular material based on target geometry. Floor plates are most commonly cut apart using a slab saw; 100 hp diesel engines, spinning diamond tipped saws, and requiring water pressure.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    With this model the entire library can be matched onto an adjustable shape, allowing for a holistic optimization where all elements simultaneously arranged. Heavy Concrete elements are transported into place by barge, and lifted by crane into new temporary assemblies. Material is no longer discarded, but rather put into new holding patterns that can maintain valuable material through generations.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    70% of a buildings structure exists in the floor plate. The slab saw can extract such material.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Floor-plates. Optimisation of the arrangement using computational modelling methods.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Rubble. Geometry is translated into a library of points that can be analyzed in the sorting phase.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Rubble. Sorting and arranging elements into an arch.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Rubble. Optimization of the arrangement of elements using computational modelling methods.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Glass. Pavilion Constructed from 178 irregular planes.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Glass. Prototype model that presents a pattern that can adapt to the irregular glass provided.

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    Unmaking Architecture – New York

    Daniel Jonathan Meiklejon Marshall – Teaching Fellow at Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dept. of Architecture.

  • Next generation Next Generation 1st prize 2020–2021 North America

An artificial-intelligence-based tool to optimize re-use and bring new life to demolition rubble.

By Daniel Marshall - Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Department of Architecture, Cambridge, MA, USA

The proposal describes an artificial intelligence-based method that enables the up-cycling of building components (including concrete floor plates, glass elements, and façade cladding) destined for dismantling. Starting from an indexed library of demolition rubble, a computational tool is able to guide the design of new buildings in order to optimize available materials.

Unmaking Architecture from New York

Project authors

  • Unmaking Architecture – New York
    Daniel Marshall

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Department of Architecture

    USA

Unmaking Architecture – New York

Floor-plates. Optimisation of the arrangement using computational modelling methods.

The entire library can be matched like jigsaw puzzle pieces onto adjustable shapes, producing significant money savings as well as a reduced carbon footprint for building construction. Material is placed in a holding pattern so that it maintains value and use through generations. The approach thereby attempts to create a less wasteful materials cycle by redeploying materials, and also reducing the volume of building rubble sent to landfill.

A pragmatic up-cycling of building components using artificial intelligence. Holcim Awards 2020 Jury for North America

Next Generation 1st prize winner Unmaking Architecture, New York – Management tool for reusing salvaged materials by Daniel Marshall, Teaching Fellow (2019/20), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA.

Unmaking Architecture New York – Project Video

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