HYDRAMAX: Port Machines in San Francisco, California by Future Cities Lab

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines in San Francisco, California by Future Cities Lab


Future Cities Lab's HYDRAMAX Port Machines project proposes a radical rethinking of San Francisco's urban waterfront post sea-level rise. The proposal renders the existing hard edges of the waterfront as new "soft systems" that would include aquatic parks, community gardens, wildlife refuges and aquaponic farms. A synthetic architecture is introduced that blurs the distinction between building, landscape, infrastructure and machine. Using thousands of sensors and motorized components, the massive urban scale robotic structure harvests rainwater and fog, while modulating air flow, solar exposure and intelligent building systems.

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines
  • Architect: Future Cities Lab
  • Name of project: HYDRAMAX: Port Machines
  • Location: San Francisco, California
  • Design: Jason Kelly Johnson & Nataly Gattegno
  • Project Manager: Ripon DeLeon; Project Interns: Gavin Johns, Cameron Eng
  • Collaborative Sponsor: MIGA Motor Company (Dr. Mark Gummin)
  • Video: Eddie Lee, Square Two Design
  • Model Materials: Cast and thermoformed acrylic, custom printed circuit boards, Arduino based microcontrollers, infrared sensors, shape memory alloy motors (Courtesy of Miga Motor Company)
Interactive Model Description: A network of infrared proximity sensors has been integrated into the four sides of the physical model. These sensors record the distance of gallery visitors to its edges. Information from these sensors is used to actuate the white feather-like "fog harvesting robots" and control the brightness of embedded LEDS. This model is an example of what Future Cities Lab calls "live models". Live models use the interaction of people to explore and simulate the potential effects of environmental forces such as fog, wind and sunlight.

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines
FUTURE CITIES LAB BIO:
Future Cities Lab is an experimental design and research office based in San Francisco, California. Design principals Jason Kelly Johnson and Nataly Gattegno have collaborated on a range of award-winning projects exploring the intersections of design with advanced fabrication technologies, robotics, responsive building systems and public space.  Their work has been published and exhibited worldwide. Most recently they were awarded the 2011 Architectural League of New York Young Architects Prize and the 2009 New York Prize Fellows at the Van Alen Institute in New York City.

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines

HYDRAMAX: Port Machines

  









Dr. EMAD HANI ISMAEEL
                 Ph.D. in Technologies for the Exploitation
                 of the Cultural Heritage .
                 Senior Lecturer in the Dept. of Architecture

                 College of Engineering , University of Mosul 
                 Mosul - Iraq .

E-mail:        emadhanee@yahoo.com
                   emadhanee@gmail.com
                   http://emadhani.blogspot.com/
Tel :           +964 (0)770 164 93 74

 

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