Earthy Honeycombs

Construction Design of Adobe Shell Structures by Topological Polyhedralization

Conference Paper (2018)
Author(s)

Karim Daw (TU Delft - Design Informatics)

Shervin Azadi (TU Delft - Architecture and the Built Environment)

Pirouz Nourian (TU Delft - Design Informatics)

Hans Hoogenboom (TU Delft - Design Informatics)

Research Group
Design Informatics
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.13140/RG.2.2.19015.75684 Other version
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Related content
Research Group
Design Informatics
Event
IASS 2018: Annual Symposium of the International Association for Shell and Spatial Structures (2018-07-16 - 2018-07-20), Boston, United States
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Abstract

Building optimal free-form compression-only adobe shells requires sophisticated molds, scaffolding, critical supervision and an expert labor force as pointed out in [1]; this is because the optimality of a compu-tationally designed shell depends on achieving the right geometric shape in construction. The objective of our research is to find ways to simplify the construction of compression-only adobe shell structures to be built as shelters. This paper presents a computational work-flow for approximating the shape of an adobe shell structure, with space filling polyhedral bricks[18], through a topological polyhedralization process. The work flow is devised to simplify the construction of an adobe structure with the prospect of participatory construction of adobe shelters. The process takes in a dynamically-relaxed optimized shape for an adobe thin shell structure as a manifold surface, approximates it with space-filling polyhedrons as a volumetric representation; forms a finite element mesh as the lattice dual to the polyhedrons; and analyzes the structures to validate their stability. We argue that the proposed approach simplifies the construction process for untrained labor forces and thus makes it possible to quickly build adobe shell structures as temporary shelters. A possible application of this method could be the participatory construction of adobe shelters for displaced communities with in-situ soil as an alternative to long-term stay in tents.