Architecture Schools Designing in Virtual Reality

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Virtual Reality

Architecture Schools Designing in Virtual Reality

Visit University of Cincinnati

by Jennifer H. Krivickas, DAAP Schools of Design & Art/College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning (DAAP)

At the University of Cincinnati College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning (DAAP), future-forward faculty are exploring with virtual reality (VR) to conduct research, make, and teach. Consequently the DAAP Library invested in a collection of ‘over the counter’ VR viewers such as Mr. Cardboard, I am Cardboard, P2 popups, unofficial cardboard, smartvr, pocket 360vr, View Master, and a few others. Funnily, since acquiring the viewers late last year, several people have asked “Why?” It is not a bad question per se, but to us the answer is…well, obvious.

DAAP Library users are architects – designers in and of space, so having the ability to create structures that actually look feel and sound like eventual physical structures, is huge. Another part of DAAP is the School of Planning, whose students, through the use of VR tech, are able to better convey size and scope of large-scale projects, a problem 2D renderings and passé, not to mention, unsustainable physical models have always posed. An important component of DAAP is our top-ranked design school where students are already designing all sorts of unorthodox next gen physical and virtual objects from web experiences to transportation to fashion objects and products…all of which can and will be translated, by our students, into and out of, virtual reality.

So this is why the DAAP Library invests in nontraditional resources like VR viewers. While VR tech is still nascent in academia, it may soon be the necessary start and end point for all design and knowledge objects, and at UC, we insist our students and faculty be ahead of the curve.

DAAP faculty member Dr. Ming Tang is teaching Architecture in the age of mixed reality, a studio that explores the relationship between virtual reality and physical architecture. His students investigate mixed reality as a framework that can expand architectural strategies such as environmental conceptualism, user interaction, building function, and construction techniques. In this class, the group studies topics such as physical and digital crossovers, augmented and virtual realities, time and ephemerality and the impacts on both architecture and architecture practice. Dr. Tang and his students will be participating in the upcoming Innovative Minds 2017 competition.

 

I interviewed a few of Dr. Tang’s students about their MR research projects:

Elizabeth Feltz, a 4th year undergraduate (B.S. Arch) is working on a project that aims to show how mixed reality technology can affect early childhood education and learning environments. Her site is the Grixdale Neighborhood of Detroit, an area that has suffered from significant population decrease and increased crime. Her project proposes renovation of an existing elementary school in the Grixdale neighborhood to create classrooms in response to virtual reality experiences of the children of the school. Parents can use VR as a tool to engage with actual space and educate their children at home. The VR classrooms will be ‘lab spaces’ where children use the software to interact with community members, creating a more unified, safe, and healthy learning environment.

Tanvi Shah, (M.Arch 2018), is attempting to solve an existing problem in many American cities – the death of downtown after 6pm. Through the use of kinetic and modular architecture combined with mixed reality, her project in downtown Cincinnati responds to this problem through creation of a building that changes function in an 8-hour cycle over a period of 24 hours to ensure continued use. Her concept works at two scales – architectural and individual. The architectural component of the project is important as it provides the user haptic feedback, making the VR experience more immersive. The individual component is the user’s VR headset. This allows users to customize the space and create environments to enhance their productivity.

It really doesn’t matter where the inspiration and intellectual content comes from. When we are asked “Why” a library would invest in non-traditional resources that spark creativity and support intellectual curiosity, our response is because that’s what libraries have always been about. We want to feed the imaginations and intellectual, creative, and entrepreneurial spirit of people.

 

(via ACSA News)

 

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