Print Email Facebook Twitter A Virtual Future for London Title A Virtual Future for London: The impact of virtual reality technology on the daily life of people, and the urban fabric Author Broeders, Annelies (TU Delft Architecture and the Built Environment; TU Delft Urbanism) Contributor van der Spek, S.C. (mentor) Read, S.A. (mentor) Cavallo, R. (graduation committee) Degree granting institution Delft University of Technology Programme Architecture, Urbanism and Building Sciences | Design of the Urban Fabric Date 2018-07-10 Abstract Virtual reality technology has captured the human imagination since before the first ceiling mounted glasses were invented in the 1960’s. Curiosity towards seeing what we can’t see and experiencing what we can’t experience, is one of the drivers behind societal and scientific progress.In 2012, the technology saw a new phase of development start. Now, professions like architecture and urban design, professions that try to communicate ideas, have started to implement the technology. The entertainment industry is running with it. The first commercial sets have been a success. This time, it seems that VR is here to stay.What happens then with the environment that we can see? This question becomes relevant now. Cyberpunk - a submovement of science fiction - always shows us the dystopian image. The metropole becomes neglected as people leave behind the physical world and loose themselves in the digital.These works of fiction have functioned as a red flag and have inspired this thesis. Within, the discussion is not whether or when VR is going to feature in the daily lives of people - the question is what the effect will be. Through the lense of VR development, current developments in the urban public space are scrutinized. The objective: to make sure that neglecting the city is not the path humanity will end upon. Subject Virtual RealitySocietal DevelopmentUrban FabricResearch Driven DesignImpact of Innovation To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:f954ad41-4388-4677-9edc-3ea775542e2d Coordinates 51.5074,0.1278 Part of collection Student theses Document type master thesis Rights © 2018 Annelies Broeders Files PDF Broeders_4209508_P5_prese ... tation.pdf 122.14 MB PDF Broeders_4209508_P5_Poster.pdf 5.64 MB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:f954ad41-4388-4677-9edc-3ea775542e2d/datastream/OBJ1/view