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Aims and Objectives

The work aims to explore a discrete and digital approach to timber construction, arguing that it is the best material for a complex, scalable and open-ended architecture with a high degree of automation. This has technical, socioeconomic and architectural consequences.

On a technical level, the work aims to develop an architecture that only consists of a limited set of repeating, serialised but versatile building blocks, digitally processed from simple timber sheet materials (13). It uses 1:1 prototypes to test these timber building blocks and develops propositions for larger residential and cultural buildings. The short, modularised, automated production chain aids the distribution of these blocks, enabling access and a decentralised network of production. As only one modular element needs to be produced, fewer steps and machines are required to automate the construction process. The traditional building industry uses hundreds of different parts and processes to construct a building, which makes it difficult and expensive to automate. By reducing the part count, the procurement process radically changes because discrete building elements can be made with a few digital machines in small factories or workshops (14).

On an architectural level, the work aims to understand the consequences of an architecture without whole, meaning that the building consists of parts that are not derived from an overall design. The parts exist independent of an actual building and should be able to construct and reconstruct a complex variety of outcomes. The form and structure of the building is dependent on the parts, and never final. The discrete parts have no specific function and there are no designated tectonic elements such as columns, beams or floorplates. By iterating in scale between 1:1 prototypes and fully fledged buildings, a discrete architectural syntax that rejects fixed hierarchies and typologies is advanced.