flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Is the AEC industry ready to shake off its retrograde image?

Architects

Is the AEC industry ready to shake off its retrograde image?

Technology has been and always will be perceived as a source for wonder and worry.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 16, 2018
Man with a VR headset on

A few weeks ago, I received a link to a Radware report warning about the “grave dangers” associated with robot networks that exploit Internet of Things devices as weapons of attack for launching ransomware and various other nasty disruptions against companies and individuals.

Around the same time, The Guardian posted on its website a 45-second video that shows SpotMini, a dog-like robot manufactured by Boston Dynamics, using a mechanical arm mounted on its back to open a door. That video went viral, with 8.3 million viewers in the first nine days who also saw the newspaper’s dire verdict that this machine advance is “terrifying.”

Technology has been and always will be perceived as a source for wonder and worry. As it becomes evermore essential to our daily functions, more than just the viewers of “Black Mirror” are concerned about tech’s encroachments.

This trepidation might explain why several of the technologists I’ve interviewed recently for stories about virtual reality and artificial intelligence in construction were at great pains to explain why technology can be disruptive in positive ways that shouldn’t threaten anyone’s psyche or livelihood.

“VR is neither good nor bad—it’s a tool,” states Jeremy Bailenson, a professor at Stanford University. In his new book, “Experience on Demand,” Bailenson acknowledges that there are “darker” sides to VR that can’t be ignored. But the best way to use it responsibly, he asserts, “is to be educated about what it is capable of.”

Alvise Simondetti, Arup’s Global Leader of Digital Environment, sees smart machines as “partners”—rather than adversaries—of humans. And he’s not buying into the fear that technology will inevitably dumb down creativity and render certain job titles obsolete.

Take last year’s launch of AutoDraw, the “doodle bot” developed by Google’s Creative Lab, which pairs machine learning with drawings from artists. AutoDraw gives a drawer the ability to replace a rough sketch with a more-refined drawing from that data library.

Some designers probably see AutoDraw as ominous. Simondetti views such “enhancements” as progress.

“Architects can only explore a narrow part of a design space solution. Machines can simply see a ton more,” says Simondetti. He adds that artificial intelligence will speed up the design process at a time when “the world can’t wait, not with the rate of urbanization.”

Such sanguinity might sound surprising coming from someone working in an industry usually characterized as tech phobic. But I get the sense that more AEC firms and their suppliers want to shake off that retrograde image and push their industry closer to the vanguard.

More AEC firms and their clients seem convinced that their readiness to at least coexist with—rather than quixotically resist—technology could decide who wins and who loses going forward.

Related Stories

| Nov 4, 2011

Mortenson Construction builds its fifth wind facility In Illinois

Shady Oaks Wind Farm is under construction near Compton, Ill.

| Nov 4, 2011

CSI and ICC Evaluation Service agree to reference GreenFormat in ICC-ES Environmental Reports?

ICC-ES currently references CSI's MasterFormat and other formats in all of its evaluation reports. The MOU will add GreenFormat references.

| Nov 4, 2011

McCarthy completes construction of South Region High School No. 2 in Los Angeles

Despite rain delays and scope changes, the $96.7 million high school was completed nearly two-months ahead of schedule.

| Nov 4, 2011

Two Thornton Tomasetti projects win NCSEA’s 2011 Excellence in Structural Engineering Awards

Altra Sede Regione Lombardia and Bank of Oklahoma Center both recognized.

| Nov 3, 2011

GREC Architects announces opening of the Westin Abu Dhabi Golf Resort and Spa

The hotel was designed by GREC and an international team of consultants to enhance the offerings of the Abu Dhabi Golf Club without imposing upon the dramatic landscapes of the elite golf course.

| Nov 3, 2011

Hardin Construction tops out Orlando Embassy Suites

The project began in April 2011 and is expected to open in fall 2012.

| Nov 3, 2011

2012 Pritzker Architecture Prize Ceremony to be held in China

The tradition of moving the event to world sites of architectural significance was established to emphasize that the prize is international, the laureates having been chosen from 16 different nations to date. 

| Nov 3, 2011

DMR Architects welcomes two new staff members

Siro Gonzalez joins the staff as junior graduate architect and Megan Byers joins the staff as marketing assistant.

| Nov 2, 2011

Mega deals drive 28% increase in global engineering and construction merger and acquisition value

Financial investors lead mega deal activity, China most active country in global domestic deals.

| Nov 2, 2011

Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. breaks ground on Alexandria Center in Cambridge, Mass.

307,000-sf building to be house to executive offices of Biogen Idec.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021