S. Brancart
18 records found
1
Additive Manufacturing With Bamboo
Mechanically Informed Infill Wall Made With Bamboo Dust and Fibers
3D Printing with Bamboo
An Early-Stage Exploration Towards Its Use in the Built Environment
Along with the circular bioeconomy principles, alternative ways of utilizing biomass waste streams are considered viable approaches to reaching sustainability goals. Accordingly, a growing body of literature is exploring new materials utilizing biomass in 3D-printing applications
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Human-Building Interaction (HBI) relies on sensor-actuator networks that are increasingly supported by Artificial Intelligence (AI). This paper presents a novel AI-supported Design-to-Robotic-Production-Assembly and -Operation (D2RPA&O) approach for reconfigurable furniture.
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Vertical perovskite solar cell envelope for the circular economy
A case study using life cycle cost analysis in Europe
Recent technological developments make perovskite solar cells (PSCs) particularly suitable for building integrated photovoltaic (BIPV) applications on vertical building envelopes, but the relatively short lifespan of PSCs requires frequent replacement, thereby generating substant
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Circularity for Educators’, and a second platform for interaction and direct exchange that we call ‘Educators for Circularity’, are part and parcel of the Circular Impulse Initiative (CII), a project intending to enhance the integration of circularity in BK education. Whereas th
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In the event sector, where there is a search for architectural constructions with an innovative morphology, reuse is key to strive towards more sustainable events. Designing modular structures and detailing them for easy disassembly and re-assembly is an ideal way to encourage an
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Reusing Timber Formwork in Building Construction
Testing, Redesign, and Socio-Economic Reflection
In 2018, the construction sector was responsible for 39% of the worldwide energy and process-related carbon dioxide emissions (Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction et al., 2019). This is partly due to the embodied carbon, which represents the carbon emissions related to
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The Circular Economy (CE) paradigm has been gaining momentum. However, the tools and methods used to design, measure and implement circularity are not immediately suitable for decision making and practice by key stakeholders. This article details a qualitative and a quantitative
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Utilising the inherent elasticity of their flexible components, bending-active struc-tures can easily be produced from planar or linear components. Although the components and their fabrication can be very simple, the deformation behaviour is often comple
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While transformable structures allow rapid assembly, reuse and reconfiguration, their technical complexity and related production or cost issues often hinder architectural application. Yet, vernacular or nomadic structures, like teepees or yurts, show how reversibility and transp
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Bending-active reciprocal structures consist of elastically bent beams in a mutually supporting weave pattern in which each connection joins only two beams. Aside from the advantages for fabrication and assembly, this system has an extensive geometric potential, allowing reuse an
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ReciPlyDome and ReciPlySkin bending
Active transformable lightweight shelters
Reciprocal Frame (RF) Structures are three-dimensional grid structures consisting of mutually supporting beams, where no more than two beams are connected at a time adding to simplicity of assembly and construction. The ReciPlyDome is a novel structural system based on utilizing
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Living in an age of rapid changes, designers are challenged to create solutions that remain sustainable in a continuously evolving environment. Since most of our earth's resources are finite, these solutions should incorporate efficient material use and reuse. Buildings and struc
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As mutually supported beam structures, reciprocal frames limit the number of components that are joined at each connection to two. However, this system of intermediate connections introduces undesirable bending moments in the beam elements. By utilising elastic deformation to cre
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In a dynamic context of rapidly evolving user needs, transformable structures anticipate and respond to changing demands in minimal time, with minimal effort. Innovative structural concepts should supplement the design of transformable structures to increase their structural and
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Curved-line folding is the act of folding a flat sheet of material along a curved crease pattern in order to create a three-dimensional shape. It is a creative and innovative way to produce lightweight and geometrically stiff components using only sheet materials. The pavilion pr
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In a context of rapid changes, resource depletion and augmenting waste production, transformable structures facilitate reuse on a structural and component level. Increasing the transformational capacity of spatial structures enables speed and ease of erection and lowers the stack
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Curved-line folding is the act of folding paper along a curved crease pattern in order to create a 3D shape, using the combination of folding (plastic deformation) and bending (elastic deformation). Up until now, the use of curved- line folding in architecture has been limited to
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