levator over the automobile, complex issues are at play in concentrating population and built infrastructure in contemporary high-rise cities. How do you meet the challenges of system design for high quality compact urban environments?
The Smartgeometry Workshop is a unique creative cauldron attracting attendees from across the world of academia, professional practice and industry. The workshop is open to 100 applicants who come together for four intensive days of design and collaboration.
More Info and to Apply
The application deadline to attend the sg2014 Workshop has been extended to June 1st, 2014 at midnight PST. Reviews and early notifications will proceed for those who have already applied.
Image: Cities without Ground - Adam Frampton, Jonathan D Solomon and Clara Wong
WORKSHOP CLUSTERS
The sg2014 Workshop will be organised around Clusters. Clusters are hubs of expertise. They comprise of people, knowledge, tools, materials and machines. The Clusters provide a focus for workshop participants working together within a common framework.
Clusters provide a forum for the exchange of ideas, processes and techniques and act as a catalyst for design resolution. The sg2014 Workshop is made up of ten Clusters that respond in diverse ways to the challenge Urban Compaction.
sg2014 WORKSHOP CLUSTERS
The Bearable Lightness of Being
Block
Deep Space
Design Space Exploration
Flows, Bits, Relationships
Fulldome Projections
HK_smarTowers
Private Microclimates
Resilient Networks
Spaces in Experience
CONFERENCE
After four intense days of innovative work, the 2-day sgConference offers an opportunity for critical reflection on what has been accomplished in the Workshop and in the global design arena. It will be an opportunity to open debates, pose questions, challenge orthodoxies, and propose new ideas.
The sgConference features invited keynote speakers showcasing major projects and research from around the globe, mixed with panel sessions for open debate. The end of the first day will include reports and highlights from the Workshop, giving an opportunity to view work created during the previous four days of intensive collaboration, design and development, followed by an exhibition of the work.
Invited Speakers & Panelists:Carlo Ratti Sensable City Lab, MITCristiano Ceccato Zaha HadidTom Kvan & Justyna Karakiewicz Melbourne UniversityJun Sato Jun Sato Structural EngineersMario Carpo Yale UniversityEddie Can Zaha HadidLi Xinggang Atelier Li Xinggang, China Architecture Design & Research GroupMartin Reise FrontPhilip Yuan Tongji ShanghaiYusuke Obuchi Tokyo UniversityYusushi Ikada Ikada-Lab Keio University, Japan
Additional speakers to be announced soon. Registration to open soon.
www.Smartgeometry.org…
repeated on any of the 3 lists.
What I have managed so far is attached, it is finding the closest points, but it is not creating the lists and it eventually repeats points.
I you can help me with this file, or suggest a better way to do it, I´ll appreciate it a lot.
Thanks…
of this 100 elements being the 3 diferent numbers on a random disposition.
Let me upload the file and see if you can spot what I' am doing wrong.
cheers…
square units. Then you have an integral number of fragments on each side. This means that if all fragments need to have the same surface area, you can only have the following possibilities for side A:
1 fragment = 100 square units
2 fragments = 50 square units each
3 fragments = 33⅓ square units each
4 fragments = 25 square units each
5 fragments = 20 " "
6 fragments = 16⅔ " "
etc.
For side B, the numbers are mostly different
1 fragment = 300 unit²
2 fragments = 150 unit²
3 fragments = 100 unit²
4 fragments = 75 unit²
For side C they are different still. Unless you join fragments across on both sides of the edges of the box, I very much doubt you'll be able to pull this off.
The solution I attached will create fragments as identical as possible, but it's a very boring outcome...
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David Rutten
david@mcneel.com
Poprad, Slovakia…