Design Studio
Bauhaus 4.0 - Fibrous Systems
Recent developments in computational design and robotic manufacturing open up new possibilities for production and materialization, challenging designers to reconsider the entire design-to-production chain. Initially developed for factory automation, industrial robots revolutionized creative disciplines where architects, artists and designers constantly push the limits of what is possible. Beyond the automation of traditional fabrication techniques, robotics offer the opportunity to explore and experiment with new, adaptive production methods. Such robust and flexible nature of robotic fabrication finds applications in the textile industry, creating new possibilities for fibrous manufacturing processes.
This semester we will explore the possibilities of fibrous robotic manufacturing as well as related concepts of mass customization and digital crafts. Traditional textile manufacturing techniques such as weaving, knitting or felting will be re-interpret through experimental prototyping and robotic fabrication. We will challenge the existing definitions of fibers and learn from existing textile techniques to develop new fibrous systems through continuous production processes. We will start by learning the basics of robotic prototyping and parametric modelling with Rhino Grasshopper.
In the second phase we will experiment with processes such as spatial fiber placement or winding as a way to develop new techniques for textile constructions. Usually, robotic fibrous constructions are put into a form and stiffened by resin and therefore bereft of the intrinsic properties of the fibers such as softness and flexibility. In this project, on the contrary, we will explore fibrous structures by embracing the material characteristics of fibers, whether they are soft or hard, elastic or firm, smooth or rough.
Finally, we will experiment with the materiality and scale of fibers, challenging their proportions and observing how certain material characteristics affect the production technique. Hands-on experiments and physical prototyping will be the core methodologies for the project development.
The Solid Rapid Prototyping Lab with the 6-axis robotic arm will be the place of experimentation and design development, our laboratory and main tool for research and design exploration. Next to the physical experiments and robotic fabrication, new forms of documentation will be tested and evaluated, where recorded videos and programming codes are automatically shared on an internal online platform, aiming to exchange knowledge and share experience for future projects.
We will work in groups, share our knowledge and learn from each other’s experiences. No prior Grasshopper or Robotics experience is required to join this project, basic Rhino skills are helpful but not a must.
Project supervision:
Agata Kycia, Jörg Hugo, Andrea Rossi, Prof. Christiane Sauer
This project is part of the collaborative, BMBF-funded research project Bauhaus 4.0 by Weißensee Kunsthochschule Berlin (Product Design, Textile-and Surface Design and Foundations) and TU Berlin (Institute of Education, Department of Educational Psychology)
https://kh-berlin.de/projekt-detail/Project/detail/bauhaus-40-3217.html.
Project supervision: Agata Kycia, Jörg Hugo, Andrea Rossi