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Apokatastasis Panton: Parametricism in Practic

Posted on:2018-06-16Degree:M.ArchType:Thesis
University:University of CincinnatiCandidate:Piotrowski, RobertFull Text:PDF
GTID:2477390020956647Subject:Architecture
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis aims to address the architectural profession's response to globalization under the neoliberal post-Fordist networked societal framework as outlined and popularized by Patrik Schumacher. This thesis will explain how the information communications technologies (ICT) Industries have taken over architectural practice with building information modeling (BIM), and have produced a system of managerialism that replaces design with an emphasis on pure economic rationality through the use of tools aimed at flexibility, communication and data management. This thesis calls into question the ICT's agenda for the built environment, specifically that of the globalized city, and provide a critique on Parametricism (Architecture's Autopoiesis) by examining one of the theory's most notable flaws, namely the absence of public agency and the abolishment of the social in both design and design process. This thesis will examine how neoliberal ideals have created the conditions for the fear of acceleration that's associated with globalization, which have allowed Parametricism to take hold of the discipline and remove the public from the associated planning and design processes, as well as mold them as subjects to the market's evolutionary and self-organizing principles.;To address this issue, this thesis proposes a method of design that utilizes mass customization and personalization alongside that of a BIM-based framework. The goal of a mass customized approach is to allow a top-down framework that enables bottom-up creative interpretation, improvisation, and execution. This design method is fundamentally participatory in nature while also utilizing advancements in software and technology related to advance manufacturing and data/network integration that are in line with neoliberal post-Fordist production processes, that is, they adhere to the pre-condition from which contemporary large scale built projects are to be built and managed.;This thesis will look at recent trends in collaborative and participatory planning utilizing gaming as a method of knowledge creation and negotiation, a method that better serves as an interface in more abstract and complex decision making processes that involve multiple agents and systems. This method seeks to address current collaborative method's failures to simulate realistic power negotiations and the modeling of the decision making mechanisms that ultimately shape the physical environments they control.;This thesis aims to explore the condition of power negotiation of this 'parametric' contemporary architecture through the design of a multi-use tower and tower fabrication facility in one of the most sought after real-estate sites in Chicago. The tower and fabrication facility will examine how mass customization works in the design of public and social space in this context of neoliberal thought, while also providing a platform for infinite development and capital flow necessary for sustainable physical and social growth that a project of this size and scope would require. This process will simulate the infinite death and rebirth cycles of late capitalism and new theories on sustainable systems, as they seek to mimic the fundamental biological principles of evolution and self-organization, as seen through architecture's recent adoption of complexity sciences and cybernetics of the ICT's industries.
Keywords/Search Tags:Thesis, Parametricism, Neoliberal
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