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223728

(2015) Advances in architectural geometry 2014, Dordrecht, Springer.

Geometrical solution space for grid structures with double-walled edges

Andres Sevtsuk, Raul Kalvo

pp. 215-231

This paper introduces a method for creating double-curved grid structures made out of flat components, where fabrication is limited to only 2-dimensional cutting, making complex architectural structures accessible to a wider audience at a lower cost. The focus of the paper is to identify the limitations and to map the geometric solution-space of the method for real world construction applications. A double-walled nature of the structure enables us to significantly reduce the geometric complexity of the grid structure's nodes – instead of needing to find a combined geometric intersection for all edges meeting at a node, our solution instead requires determining a pair of adjacent planes at a time, as many times as a node's degree. But if any of these pairs of planes around a node is torsioned relative to the node's normal, then collisions might occur between different pairs of planes. This paper discusses the geometric solution-space under which such collisions are avoided, making the structural joints easy to build. As a proof of concept, we demonstrate the use of this method in a design-build pavilion that was realized at the Singapore University of Technology and Design in 2013.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-11418-7_14

Full citation:

Sevtsuk, A. , Kalvo, R. (2015)., Geometrical solution space for grid structures with double-walled edges, in P. Block, J. Knippers & W. Wang (eds.), Advances in architectural geometry 2014, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 215-231.

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