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THE NEW OPEN【Minds】
Workshop

28 October 2022
@ TU Delft

Mindsets, not just datasets

THE NEW OPEN cultivates open mindsets, not just open data sets, to bridge the gap between the theory and practice of open data design.

THE NEW OPEN 【 Minds 】 Workshop 🤝

*

28 October 2022

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THE NEW OPEN 【 Minds 】 Workshop 🤝 * 28 October 2022 *

THE NEW OPEN【Minds】Workshop initiates an active dialogue, and presents new forms of collaboration between architects, data scientists and AI researchers on the use of open data for climate positive planning and design. This workshop is an initial step in discussing the fundamentals of how to design for a future open data society.【🕹️】

To ignite this new path of innovation, we are inviting design practitioners who develop and apply custom built software solutions for architectural design to intermingle with researchers that explore the use of AI, open data, and open science for architecture.【🤝】

Participants

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Participants *

Deniz Arikan * OMA *

Deniz Arikan * OMA *

Lydia Giokari * Mecanoo *

Lydia Giokari * Mecanoo *

Leo Stuckardt * MVRDV *

Leo Stuckardt * MVRDV *

“A design culture of open data can have strong effects beyond the necessary assemblies of large, accessible and affordable databases: Within the architectural discourse, it can contribute to new narratives that explore architectural form as an interplay of geometrical shape and performative impact. These new narratives in turn can increase the availability of specific reference data, which enables the forecasting of impacts within the early stages of design processes. Open data can therefore not be separated from open models that interpret, correlate and communicate it.”

Leo Stuckardt
MVRDV

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Seyran Khademi * TU Delft *

Seyran Khademi * TU Delft *

Javier Cuartero * KAAN Architecten*

Javier Cuartero * KAAN Architecten*

Alejandro Fuentes * KCAP *

Alejandro Fuentes * KCAP *

“There is a vast amount of data generated and stored daily that describe people’s behaviour in the built environment; data that shows the use of public space, infrastructures, buildings, even interiors. This data, if used as part of the inventory and concept phase of any design process, could inform and influence our designs and decision making while designing and re-thinking existing built structures. This process can lead to more future-proof designs that respond to the users’ changing needs, since they derive from users’ behaviour, patterns, or indicators, resulting in a more sustainable, resilient built environment.”

Lydia Giokari
Mecanoo

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Claudiu Forgaci * TU Delft *

Claudiu Forgaci * TU Delft *

Diana Popa * TU Delft *

Diana Popa * TU Delft *

Stefano Calzati * TU Delft *

Stefano Calzati * TU Delft *

Alejandro Fuentes
KCAP

“In looking at the role of designers until now, I would define us as ‘gardeners’. Data makes sense in the context of our own fictions. Our role is to quantify Good & Evil; we become regulators, curators of mass data, critics of data’s own accuracy.”

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Environmental awareness began exactly fifty years ago with the publication of “The Limits to Growth”, in 1972, by the Club of Rome, an informal group of crossdisciplinary thinkers who predicted our current climate crisis. We have now arrived at the very place they predicted. THE NEW OPEN launch events will commemorate the Club of Rome’s work and give special focus to the environmental urgencies of rapidly advancing climate change.

THE NEW OPEN【Minds】 Workshop 🕹️ Programme
28 October 2022

@ TU Delft, Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment, Berlage Zaal 1, Floorplan

  • Dennis Pohl is Postdoctoral Researcher at Theory of Architecture and Digital Culture at TU Delft. His research interest lies in a material and cultural history of the digital in architecture. In his PhD research titled “Designing Europe: The Architecture of Territory, Politics, and Institutions,” he analyzed how architectural design techniques historically impacted political planning in post-war Europe. Dennis was a research fellow at the DFG research group “Knowledge in the Arts” at the Berlin University of the Arts (2015-2018), and DAAD fellow at the Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation at Columbia University New York (2018). He was co-director of the AA Visiting School Brussels “The House of Politics,” contributed to the project “Eurotopie” in the Belgian pavilion at the 16th Architecture Biennial in Venice., and guest-edited the 239 issue 239 of the journal ARCH+, entitled “Europe: Infrastructures of Externalization.”

  • Leo Stuckardt is an architect and researcher with a focus on emerging technologies, computational tools and speculative design. At MVRDV since 2015, he co-founded the in-house computational research & development unit MVRDV NEXT in 2017 to focus on the development and implementation of new technologies. He has taught at The Why Factory, TU Delft and workshops at IIT Chicago, Tsinghua University and Chiba University Tokyo. Within the research program of The New Normal at the Strelka Institute in Moscow, he developed atoll.city, a platform for urban design and governance based on deep learning.

  • Claudiu Forgaci is an Assistant Professor of Urban Design and Analytics at TU Delft, with a specialty in research at the intersections & transdisciplinary implications of urban design, urban resilience, and spatial data science. He explores the proactive role of urban design in anticipating and responding to acute shocks and chronic stresses in social, environmental, and economic natures. As coordinator of Spatial Data and GIS education of the Department of Urbanism, he promotes data literacy and critical use of data in urbanism education. With his eScience Centre fellowship “Rbanism”, he aims to overcome the learning challenges involved in advanced uses of research software in the field of urbanism.

  • Lydia Giokari is an architect with Mecanoo Architecten (Delft) where she has contributed to urban development visions and feasibility studies. She specialises in speculative design for the future development of Dutch cities, with particular interest in how strategic urban decisions affect the architectural scale of projects. She has worked at Atelier 66 in Greece (Athens) and she collaborated as an independent architect and editor with Studio Ossidiana (Rotterdam).

  • Alejandro Fuentes is Computational Designer at KCAP in the Rotterdam Office, where he focuses on major urban planning projects, developing in-house analysis algorithms and recasting the boundaries of architecture and urbanism by fostering critical thought in the context of design speculation. His focus is in data driven design and Computational Thinking Theory where computational design considers environmental evaluations in guiding design decision-making processes. He has been a guest lecturer at ETSAMadrid and he will join the TU Delft faculty as Guest Teacher in Parametric Urban Design.

  • Deniz Arikan is an experienced architect and BIM Manager with a history of working in the architecture & construction industry. After completing his Master of Architecture at the Middle East Technical University, he worked at Tabanlioglu Architects and then at GMW Architects in Istanbul. In 2018 he moved to the Netherlands and worked at KAAN Architecten as BIM Coordinator. Since 2019, he’s been working at OMA as the BIM & Design Technology Manager.

  • Seyran Khademi is an Assistant Professor in Theory of Architecture and Digital Culture and co-director of AiDAPT lab both at TU Delft. Her research focus is artificial intelligence, computer vision, machine learning, and visual data in interdisciplinary research. Seyran is an interdisciplinary postdoctoral researcher working on the ArchiMediaL project, and has been leading different interdisciplinary projects including DePTH at the Royal Library of the Netherland, and Intelligent Promo Generation in collaboration with RTL news, and AmsterTime in research with Stadsarchief Amsterdam.

  • Javier Cuartero works at KAAN Architecten in design technologies, where he mentors in BIM (Revit) software skills, visual programming and document management. His fascination with technology and the ever-evolving AEC industry’s digital transformation fuel his knowledge of the interfaces between architecture and other disciplines, particularly in working towards a more open, transparent, sustainable, and collaborative future.

  • Stefano Calzati is a former journalist with Italian news agency ANSA who is currently completing a postdoc in urban data science in the Department of Urbanism at TU Delft. His research and teaching addresses technology governance, philosophy of technology, data ethics and ICTs geopolitics, with special focus on ecosystemic approaches to data governance and ethics-related to the digitalization of the urban environment. He has researched China-Africa relations in ICTs at Tallinn University of Technology, and data literacies as a visiting researcher at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.

  • Diana Popa is Data Steward at the Faculty of Architecture and the Built Environment at TU Delft with a research background in social sciences. She has done research into how trust works in the virtual environment and has become interested in open access and its benefits after working with the e-Humanities group in Amsterdam. She currently focuses on research data management support.

  • The event will take place in the Aula Conference Center, TU Delft, Mekelweg 5, 2628 CC Delft.

    Registration RSVP

    Directions and accessibility

Get in touch

We look forward to collaborating with you to co-create the visions of the future.【 💌 】



General­ inquiries: ­weareopen@newopen.design
Editor­ in ­Chief:­ Georg Vrachliotis georg@newopen.design
Research­ Coordinator:­ Dennis Pohl dennis@newopen.design

A mind lab for open data design and social change

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