Grasshopper

algorithmic modeling for Rhino

Hi All,

     Sorry this is not directly related to GH, but anyway i though someone here might be able to help.

I was looking for resources (Papers, thesis,...) on Form finding techniques. To be more precise, i want to create a diagram that links Parametric and Algorithmic design techniques... Hoping to create some sort of a "mind-map" diagram with the relationships, hierarchy and order of titles including:

Form Finding

Algorithmic Design

Parametric Design

Evolutionary Design

Computational Design

Procedural Design

Swarm Intelligence

Cellular Automata

Genetic Algorithms

Artificial Life

Generative Growth

Fractal Geometry

Digital Morphogenesis

Emergence

Neural Networks

Thanks

Views: 4140

Replies to This Discussion

Problem with these terms is that they are over-used and over-hyped. I'm not even sure what all these terms mean exactly, their usage is often so ambiguous. Without checking the official definitions, I drew a small map from how I understand these terms. I think you could pretty much keep on drawing arrows until all terms are connected to all other terms. The only thing I don't see is how fractal geometry fits into all this.

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David Rutten

david@mcneel.com

Poprad, Slovakia

Perhaps fractal geometry is not a concept to apply in design. I understand fractal geometry like a consequence of some kind of math/computational design. L-system or some kind of swarm logic are able to create that kind of geometry.

Almost every one of those terms is capable of producing fractal geometry*. Just as they are all capable of producing smooth spheres. 

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David Rutten

david@mcneel.com

Poprad, Slovakia

* with the possible exception of cellular automata, which are resolution bound.

Indeed it is :)

Cellular Automata are capable of producing fractal geometry too... see Wolfram.

yes, and where do I place my self in there? Thank you David for this nice picture, I like it!

Thanks a million David, i love the diagram, you've done exactly what i had in mind (Actually it's a bit scary, do u have a mind reading plug-in!!!!)

David, don't try to make sense of design jargon. It mostly consists of hijacking specialized terms from other fields in an attempt to make their discourse sound has having more depth than it actually has.

Seriously, why would any designer use cellular automata except because the term sounds really cool.

Totally agree. There is a big air balloon around all this math/algorithmic/... concepts that make some people search on them support for their empty projects...but...wasn't the same thing done in '20-'30 with the International Style (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_style_(architecture))? They were only "simple" rules to justify design decisions, just like voronoi, l-system, cellular automaton...

Architecture has always used some kind of "in"-flavour to introduce itself in the contemporary cultural environment. 

i'm not sure, but i assumed,
that the cellular automata generate the opportunities
to generate all types of surface-textures/structures.
that sounds somehow attractive for designers.
or not?

it is merely a question that i ask in space.

Once I heard a famouse arcitect say `what the line was for Corbusier, is the spline for me`. :-)

I agree with you that most of this terms get used to sound good and sell a product. Or to give a name in anyway.

I'm sure if you try hard enough you can do interesting things with it, as with everything else.

My point was that it wouldn't have gathered so much interest from designers if instead it was called "the funky squares effect".

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