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BIFURCATION
Structure conceived as branching columns

This workshop looked at two challenges: the description and representation of columns the creation of a potentially underlying geometrical guide, and how to branch columns and join them elegantly to the trunk.

 

The aim was to work in two modes: design computation through parametric design software, and physically in terms of thinking about how to produce branching columns with our hands. Focusing on mould-making while considering the alternatives.

 

The workshop included several lectures and seminars, a site visit to Sagrada Família, hands-on master classes in Grasshopper™, and digital and hand-made mould-making workshop sessions.

MAA02 winter term seminar, 2017.
The Master in Advanced Architecture at the Institute of Advanced Architecture of Catalonia (IAAC)

Bifurcation

 

Led by Mark Burry and Rodrigo Aguirre 
Assistants: Thora H Arnardottir, Jakob Havlik & Jayant Khanuja

Students: Kathleen Bainbridge, Camilla Franchini, Javier Lopez Alascio Hervas, Nasser Ghannam, Guoliang Zhang, Cagan Izigi, Evelina Ilina, Gelder Van Limburg Stirum, Ricardo Mayor Luque, Thanos Zervos, Keesje Avis, Sebastian Amorelli, Montakan Manosong, Valerie Frey, Cristina Pardo, Yachieh Chang

Master students interpret Gaudi's column at Mark Burry's seminar, Bifurcation. Learning from his design for the unfinished Colònia Güell chapel (1898-1914) Antoni Gaudí wanted the structure for the Sagrada Família Basilica (1882 – ongoing) to be ‘equilibrated’ and calculated accordingly. By equilibrated we mean that the gravity forces for the whole basilica are directed axially through the columns: each column is therefore aligned to meet these forces as efficiently as possible through their axes. As a calculated optimised solution, every column is positioned slanted rather than vertically, which is atypical compared with what we are used to seeing in the majority of buildings. The Sagrada Família Basilica is, therefore, a visual representation of the accommodation of gravity loading at work.

 

Columns on their own will not efficiently accommodate all the forces being grounded unless they are subdivided through branching up to meet the masses that they are required to support. The lyricism of Gaudí’s expression of worship beneath the canopy of a petrified forest is therefore matched by a lyrical structural solution.

Poetic in its simplicity, such a solution nevertheless introduces formal complexity: how do we make branching columns, and what is the nature of the joint between trunks and branches?

 

The three columns in the making
Students: Cagan Izigi, Evelina Ilina, Gelder Van Limburg Stirum, Ricardo Mayor Luque, Thanos Zervos, Keesje Avis

Three profile-curves in development
Student: Kathleen Bainbridge, Camilla Franchini, Javier Lopez Alascio Hervas, Nasser Ghannam, Guoliang Zhang

Possible profile geometry
Students: Sebastian Amorelli, Montakan Manosong, Valerie Frey, Cristina Pardo, Yachieh Chang

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