Digital Tectonic Design
Digital Tectonic Design
Digital Tectonic Design
Beesley, Philip and Thomas Seebohm. “Digital Tectonic Design.” Promise and Reality: State of the Art versus State of
Practice in Computing for the Design and Planning Process. 18th eCAADe Conference Proceedings. Universität Weimar.
Weimar. 2000.
Digital Tectonic Design
Presented at eCAADe Conference, Hannover 2000
Figure 1: a) Seagram Building, Mies Van der Rohe 1958, corner detail; b) and c) 860 and 880 Lakeshore Drive, Chicago, Mies
Van der Rohe 1951, corner detail; d) Hanna House, Palo Alto, Frank Lloyd Wright 1936, detail vocabulary showing “unit lines”.
Throughout Mies van der Rohe’s work there is an implied limitless cellular space into
which the planes of his abstract space and the tectonic components of his envelopes are insert-
ed.[2] At 860-880 Lakeshore, this cellular space is characterized by a square grid plan whose
intersections are the centres of the columns. All other components are positioned in relation to
the columns. This approach, where individual components are expressed with particular emphasis
on joints between them corresponds with the concept of objects (symbols or blocks) in com-
puter aided design. The assembly of components that represent a column (for example I section
steel, fireproofing, drywall, steel plate cladding, angle brackets) can be represented as a hierarchi-
cal three-dimensional object with origin at the intersection of the grid lines. Similarly, one bay of
curtain wall cladding can be combined into a system consisting of small I beam mullions and win-
dow panels with insertion points controlled by the underlying grid system.
A second example is the design of the Usonian houses of Frank Lloyd Wright, the first
built version of which was the Herbert Jacobs house of 1936. Each of the Usonian house types
(the polliwog, the inline, the diagonal, the hexagonal and the two-story type) had a kit of parts or
"grammar" as Wright called it.[3] These parts were grouped according to Gottfried Semper’s
19th century theory of four elements of architecture: earthwork, interpreted as a slab on grade
with built in radiant heating pipes; hearth, interpreted as a massive central brick pier with fire-
place; framework, interpreted as brick piers and a roof of tiered 2x4’s; and an enclosing mem-
brane, a "woven fabric" consisting of thin board and batten walls sandwiched together with a thin
wood core.[4] Internal partitions followed the same construction as the exterior enclosure.
These Usonian parts are like digital symbols inserted in a three-dimensional gridded cage. The
Jacobs house follows a two foot by four foot grid with thirteen-inch vertical divisions, corre-
sponding to triple brick mortar joints aligning with joints in board and batten walls.
A particular example is in the enclosure of the Hanna House in Palo Alto whose first
phase working drawings date from 1936.[5] Here the underlying grid is a hexagonal mesh and
the board and batten walls and partitions weave in and out along the edges of the hexagons.
This effectively emphasizes the Semperian conception of an enclosure as woven fabric. The com-
ponents of the partitions are all drawn so that they can be inserted with respect to the hexago-
nal grid without measurement. Insertion points are shown for each component (figure 1d). In
plan and section the positioning of each component with respect to these "unit lines" is shown.
The digital studio project illustrated in figure 2 employs a similar approach to these his-
torical examples. Façade elements are here developed from individual glazing units in interlock-
ing angled positions. The student project included fine-grained development of mounting details
for the envelope system. Attachment points for these hardware systems were translated into
insertion points for digital symbols. Like a large scale textile, this skin is built out of arrays of the
individual elements. The rhythmic combination of these units gave the project a shimmering sur-
face, like a scaled reptile skin. Thus the interlinking relationships of the attachment patterns
directly produce the particular character for this architecture. This approach offers an effective
and highly expressive method for design.
Figure. 2: Façade detail,Canadian Embassy in Berlin, digital model by Peter Marshall, University of Waterloo, 1998
Notes
[1] Frampton, Kenneth. Studies in Tectonic Culture, MIT Press, p. 192 , 1996.
[2] Ibid., p. 207.
[3] Sergeant, John, Frank Lloyd Wright’s Usonian Houses.Whitney, 1976.
[4] Frampton, Kenneth. Studies in Tectonic Culture, MIT Press, p. 117 , 1996.
[5] Hanna, Paul R. and Jean S., Frank Lloyd Wright’s Hanna House, MIT Press, 1981.