GMU:Urban Development Kit/Organic City: Difference between revisions

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==Organic City (working title)==
==Organic City / Reef City==


Thought's are still being brought into order. Please wait.
After some thought I have decided that the aspect I’m most interested and fascinated by at the moment <br>
is the translation of urban, geometric static forms into organic shapes.
 
What would a building look like, if it weren’t a human-build structure with strict constraints but a free flowing shape,<br>
changing its form to adjust to its needs? What would maybe even a whole city look like?
 
To deal with these questions I have begun to research coral reefs. I consider them to be metropolises of the sea<br>
as they provide a variety of organisms with food and shelter. Even though they cover less than 0.1 % of ocean surface,<br>
they harbor 25 % of all marine species.
 
For this project I would like to try and “translate” a city (or part of a city) like Weimar into a reef-like structure and see,<br>
what changes emerge through the organic shape-building. Maybe some of these realizations can even be of use<br>
in the process of future urban development connected to global warming.   


<gallery>
<gallery>

Revision as of 11:24, 18 November 2013

Organic City / Reef City

After some thought I have decided that the aspect I’m most interested and fascinated by at the moment
is the translation of urban, geometric static forms into organic shapes.

What would a building look like, if it weren’t a human-build structure with strict constraints but a free flowing shape,
changing its form to adjust to its needs? What would maybe even a whole city look like?

To deal with these questions I have begun to research coral reefs. I consider them to be metropolises of the sea
as they provide a variety of organisms with food and shelter. Even though they cover less than 0.1 % of ocean surface,
they harbor 25 % of all marine species.

For this project I would like to try and “translate” a city (or part of a city) like Weimar into a reef-like structure and see,
what changes emerge through the organic shape-building. Maybe some of these realizations can even be of use
in the process of future urban development connected to global warming.