Things have been a little serious on this blog recently, so here's a cool time-lapse video of a plastic bottle sculpture being created for the Flux opening party in 2011! They reused more than 8000 plastic water bottles to make this happen.. For those of you who don't know, Flux is the Australia and New Zealand Student Architecture Congress held once every two years (next ones in 2013) organised by SONA/AIA. If you want to know more then check out the Flux website as well as the videos from the event and follow Flux on twitter!
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Discussion: Three things that could change the Faculty for the better
Three things that could change the Faculty of the Built
Environment for the better:
More design thinking will teach us the best ways to solve design problems. There is a growing school of thought that encourages applying a process of design thinking to solve problems. Governments, big-businesses and schools worldwide are beginning to realise the potential of thinking creatively to fix things that aren’t working but we aren’t being guided towards this new way of thinking. Currently we’re being taught to evolve our own process of approaching a brief from beginning to end but is this still the most relevant way of teaching students how to think? Back in the day there were a lot more contact hours with tutors/mentors having a lot more time to sculpt the design approach students take and suggest why a particular approach might not be suitable. Students had the opportunity to be exposed to the approach tutors have learnt from experience. It is debatable whether this is still possible with diminishing contact hours and increasing class sizes, in a 4 hour studio with 15 students a tutor only has 16 minutes with each student a week. This is hardly enough time to help each student to learn how to think. What we need is an alternative approach to teaching design thinking. We need to be taught the process of approaching a design and the theory behind why this is the best way; we can’t just be expected to find our own way. What I’m talking about is already being taught elsewhere in schools like the Strelka Institute in Moscow or the Stanford d.school, students are being taught how to think more directly. The d.school actually has a bunch of designthinking resources available for anyone to just pick up and use, they break down the design thinking process into five modes: empathize, define, ideate, prototype and test. Possible solutions would be to run compulsory design thinking workshops for all students in the faculty or have a core-design thinking course in all BE degrees.
Subscribing to Lynda.com
would solve the problem of many BE courses not providing enough software
learning resources. You’d think that since learning a particular piece of
software (Sketchup, Autocad, Revit, 3dsMax, Photoshop, Indesign ) is usually an
integral part of learning how to design then the courses we pick up should teach us
how to use them.. unfortunately this isn’t always the case. Courses often
expect students to “jump right in” and start using new software straight away, as
a result leaving many students to self-learn software with little resources (if
any) while still being required to meet other course outcomes. The fact is that
not all the resources we need when learning these software packages are always
available to us for free on the internet. Whether we can find the most
appropriate resources at the time is another problem (one that Fbesoc is attempting to resolve with the dwiki). Purchasing an
institutional subscription would automatically fix this problem by providing
students access to quality tutorials on just about every piece of software
students are expected to learn. Up until this happens students will have to pay
an extra US$250 for something they are technically already paying for.
Architecture 2030 asks
architecture schools from across the globe to do one thing and that’s to add
the following design requirement to every brief given to students:
"the design engage the environment in a way that dramatically reduces or eliminates the need for fossil fuel"
"the design engage the environment in a way that dramatically reduces or eliminates the need for fossil fuel"
The idea being to establish an awareness of the environmental
impact architecture has and the consequences of design decisions. Currently,
the building industry accounts for as much as 30% of the world’s energy
consumption; adding the requirement to student briefs is part of the
Architecture 2030 challenge to make the building industry carbon-neutral by
2030. The architecture program at UNSW already requires students to complete
two core environment courses which educate students to take into consideration
environmental factor when designing, so it only makes sense to follow through and
connect the theory with the practical design studios. Doing so would ensure
students get a practical understanding of how to reduce the environmental impact
of the buildings they design as well as learn how to be creative in these
solutions.
What do you think could change the Faculty for the better? Leave your comments below!
What do you think could change the Faculty for the better? Leave your comments below!
Competition: Aurora Borealis Observatory
Arch Medium is organise and run international student design competition to give students the opportunity to get involved in academic Architecture, design and city planning competitions under the same conditions as in professional competitions.
Right now they're running a competition to design a Aurora Borealis Observatory which will allow people to reconnect with the wonders of nature. Definitely worth checking out!
Website: http://en.archmedium.com/Concursos/OBA/Summary.php
Right now they're running a competition to design a Aurora Borealis Observatory which will allow people to reconnect with the wonders of nature. Definitely worth checking out!
Website: http://en.archmedium.com/Concursos/OBA/Summary.php
Friday, January 13, 2012
Come help us out during O-week 2012!
And we're back with some excellent news for you all, fbesoc will be at O-week 2012! We're going to have our own stall and everything! There's talk of textas, coloured pencils, architectural cherades, drawing comps, zines, and maybe even jenga! All will be revealed at O-week 2012!
In the mean time we're on the look out for volunteers to help us man & woman the fbesoc stall. O-week will be held from Monday 20th February to Friday 24th February and the fbesoc stall will open for all of it. If you'd like to get involved in the fun and are free to help out on any of those days then please shoot us an email to contact@fbesoc.com and we'll get you in the loop!
In the mean time we're on the look out for volunteers to help us man & woman the fbesoc stall. O-week will be held from Monday 20th February to Friday 24th February and the fbesoc stall will open for all of it. If you'd like to get involved in the fun and are free to help out on any of those days then please shoot us an email to contact@fbesoc.com and we'll get you in the loop!
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