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Living City, Deedee Gordon and Mark Hansen: Van Alen InstituteVan Alen Institute announced the Living City, an exhibition by New York Prize Fellows David Benjamin and Soo-in Yang.
In the future, walls will breathe and buildings will talk to one another.
Construction materials and systems that have been inert for thousands of years will respond in real-time to the dynamic conditions of their surrounding environments and to a larger network of data.
Architecture will come to life and create a Living City.
Living City is a large-scale installation of a building skin designed to breathe in response to air quality.
During their tenure as Van Alen Institute Fellows, Benjamin and Yang have been developing one of the first full-scale architecture prototypes to link local responses in a building to a distributed network of sensors throughout the city.
The prototype will be based at Van Alen Institute's public gallery and will communicate wirelessly with air quality sensors around New York City, moving in response to information the sensors collect.
Using the city as a research lab, Benjamin and Yang propose an architecture that functions as a public interface to urban air quality, creating a platform for an ecology of building skins where individual buildings receive, share and respond to data as part of a collective network.
more: Living City, Deedee Gordon and Mark Hansen: Van Alen Institute
design directory:
Van Alen Institute > Urban Design Organizations
November 20, 2007 | Viewed 29,387 time(s)
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