How cybernetic is parametrization?

Authors

  • Anja Pratschke Institute of Architecture and Urbanism of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil
  • Mariah Guimarães Di Stasi Institute of Architecture and Urbanism of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil

Keywords:

parametrization, Cybernetics, design processes

Abstract

Parametrization is being introduced for years in education and in architectural designs around the world. To be used in its full potential, it demands a revision from the actual focus in design of the form giving, still a central part of architectural design practice and education. According to Hugh Dubberly, the shift should be to concentrate on the process’ planning as a whole, establishing relations between object and environment, and actor who occupies both (Dubberly, 2008, p.9). Parametrization isn’t new. Originally, it was born with the Sketchpad development, in 1963 by Ivan Sutherland, which was "a mechanism based on propagation and, at the same time, a simultaneous solver." (Woodbury, 2010). Parametric Design derives from the Graph Theory and, within that, from the propagation-based system, which assumes that the user organizes the graph, so that it can be directly solved. According to Robert Woodbury, this is the simplest type of parametric system, organizing objects so that the known information is based on unknown information. Knowing the theories behind the parametric design, the principles, advantages and fields of knowledge needed to master how to do it, which means, design with code, focusing on information management and its visibility in areas such as Building Information Modeling [BIM] and File to Factory, becomes a professional survival strategy in a competitive and international market based on expertise (Woodbury, 2010).

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Author Biographies

Anja Pratschke, Institute of Architecture and Urbanism of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil

He is Architect and PhD in Computer Science, Professor and researcher at the Institute of Architecture and Urbanism of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil. She is Co-coordinator of Nomads.usp - Center of Interactive Living Studies, where she develops and supervises researches in Design Process and Communication in Architecture subjects.

Mariah Guimarães Di Stasi, Institute of Architecture and Urbanism of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil

She is Architect and Urbanist. She studies cyber aspects of architectural design processes at Nomads.usp - Center of Interactive Living Studies, of the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Published

2015-12-10