Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns

Contemporary architecture has failed to engage the rich culture of planar and spatial transformations of historical Muslim architecture, often relegating it to a form of naive pastiche or, at best, to the realm of historical reconstruction. In this project we make use of current digital technologies...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jamali Firouzabadi, Farshad
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4163
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-41632018-01-05T17:23:13Z Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns Jamali Firouzabadi, Farshad Digital Tessellation pattern Geometry Traditional carpet Contemporary architecture has failed to engage the rich culture of planar and spatial transformations of historical Muslim architecture, often relegating it to a form of naive pastiche or, at best, to the realm of historical reconstruction. In this project we make use of current digital technologies in an attempt to revisit and reinterpret, in modern terms, the geometric structure of patterns embedded in the historic Islamic architecture of Iran. The original contribution of this project lies in extending traditional two dimensional tiling patterns into a dynamic three dimensional state with the help of computational tools. The analogy to the classical Persian carpet as well as mobile character of design can also be seen as original. The notion of ‘transparency’ and ‘dynamism’ are interpreted using Autodesk’s Maya and Bentley’s Generative Components software. This report illustrates initial explorations and outlines future possibilities. In the past architects of the country were responsible for making the enclosure heaven-like while it was carpet weavers’ job to make the floor heaven-like. In this project as a symbolic approach, carpet and weaving becomes both the enclosure and the floor to define both floor and roof and symbolize the new approach through which we as architects use other disciplines and new tools such as new software to learn and shape the space and discover new vocabulary for a contemporary and local architecture for Iran. Applied Science, Faculty of Architecture and Landscape Architecture (SALA), School of Graduate 2009-02-03T19:36:36Z 2009-02-03T19:36:36Z 2008 2008-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4163 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ 4342084 bytes application/pdf University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Digital
Tessellation pattern
Geometry
Traditional carpet
spellingShingle Digital
Tessellation pattern
Geometry
Traditional carpet
Jamali Firouzabadi, Farshad
Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns
description Contemporary architecture has failed to engage the rich culture of planar and spatial transformations of historical Muslim architecture, often relegating it to a form of naive pastiche or, at best, to the realm of historical reconstruction. In this project we make use of current digital technologies in an attempt to revisit and reinterpret, in modern terms, the geometric structure of patterns embedded in the historic Islamic architecture of Iran. The original contribution of this project lies in extending traditional two dimensional tiling patterns into a dynamic three dimensional state with the help of computational tools. The analogy to the classical Persian carpet as well as mobile character of design can also be seen as original. The notion of ‘transparency’ and ‘dynamism’ are interpreted using Autodesk’s Maya and Bentley’s Generative Components software. This report illustrates initial explorations and outlines future possibilities. In the past architects of the country were responsible for making the enclosure heaven-like while it was carpet weavers’ job to make the floor heaven-like. In this project as a symbolic approach, carpet and weaving becomes both the enclosure and the floor to define both floor and roof and symbolize the new approach through which we as architects use other disciplines and new tools such as new software to learn and shape the space and discover new vocabulary for a contemporary and local architecture for Iran. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Architecture and Landscape Architecture (SALA), School of === Graduate
author Jamali Firouzabadi, Farshad
author_facet Jamali Firouzabadi, Farshad
author_sort Jamali Firouzabadi, Farshad
title Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns
title_short Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns
title_full Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns
title_fullStr Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns
title_full_unstemmed Magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns
title_sort magic carpet : digital interpretation of traditional tessellation patterns
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/4163
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