Today’s electromagnetic and earth observation systems are propelling a future-habitats’ design movement that could be named Astrospatial Architecture.
Spaceship Earth is back on the agenda with futuristic architects and environmental planners. Popularized by Richard Buckminster Fuller and other modern science pundits during America’s 1960s space race against Russia, this term remains the most evocative of several concepts which promote the accelerating ambition to manage holistically our planet’s environmental systems.
In this century, the Spaceship Earth dream is being facilitated by tele computation tools originally devised to fly airplanes, rockets and satellites. Pulsing the scenes flickering across our myriad screens are the semiconductor and sensor-enabled infrastructures of massive parallelism; connecting non-visual data across globally distributed grids of processors, portals and storage banks. As predicted by Al Gore in his 1992 proposal for a “Digital Earth” global climate model, parallelism seems to be the only systems architecture, and conceptual metaphor, that could “cope with the enormous volume of data that will be routinely beamed down from orbit”.
How will all these bits of information help architects to envisage structures made of atoms? This question, published in 1995 by William J. Mitchell to extrapolate the urban development implications of common access to the Internet, still highlights the crucial paradox and paradigm for professionals dealing with virtual architecture. He wrote: “The network is the urban site before us, an invitation to design and construct the City of Bits (capital of the twenty-first century). ... But this new settlement will turn classical categories inside out and will reconstruct the discourse in which architects have engaged from classical times until now. ... How shall we shape it?”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July-August 2017-Ausgabe von Geospatial World.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent ? Anmelden
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July-August 2017-Ausgabe von Geospatial World.
Starten Sie Ihre 7-tägige kostenlose Testversion von Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierte Premium-Storys sowie über 8.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
Advanced Image And Signal Processing To Affordable Launch Systems: The Excitement Continues
Space has once again become the “new frontier” with capabilities such as in-orbit satellite servicing and in-orbit assembly incessantly challenging the human mind. Intriguing geospatial innovations have blurred the difference between reality and science-fiction. Such developments are exciting and encouraging, MDA CEO Howard Lance tells in an exclusive interview
40 Years Of Disruptive Innovation In 3D
40 Years Of Disruptive Innovation In 3D
Cleaning Up Space Debris
A spacecraft thruster that fuels itself by eating space junks is all set to take off with the Airbus Bartolomeo mission.
Newest In The Self-driving Cars Mix- Rental Companies
With numerous talks about how autonomous vehicles are going to transform the transportation industry, rental car companies are making sure they don’t lag behind.
Mapping Sanitation
Hexagon Geospatial’s technology is helping an Indian city resolve its poor sanitation and provide a better life to the less affluent communities.
How Satellites Are Rebooting Building Design
Today’s electromagnetic and earth observation systems are propelling a future-habitats’ design movement that could be named Astrospatial Architecture.
Luciad's Smart City
Solution Makes Real Time Data Visualization Easy
Satellite Imagery+Crop Insurance=Small Holder Farmer's Gain
Satellite intelligence is enriching new insurance products aimed at helping India's smallholders to withstand climate shocks
He Rocked the Mapping World
THE HARDER THE STRUGGLE, THE more glorious the triumph. But not many people have the courage to persevere in the face of failures.
Rolling in the Deep
WHEN IT COMES TO choosing a career path, India has a long tradition of following the family practise. It is pretty common to see a doctor’s son taking up medicine or a chartered accountant’s daughter joining her father’s firm. So, when the son of the Dean of the city’s medical college and the grandson of the state’s most prominent physician decided to break the family tradition, quite a few eyebrows were raised.