Wired Design at ICFF 2012
Released on 05/24/2012
I'm Alan Rapp with Wired Design at
the 24th International Contemporary Furniture Fair
in New York.
(electronic music)
This year more than 500 exhibitors
from global manufacturers, to small studios making
their debut are converging to present
their visions for contemporary design.
We're in the booth of Virginia Tech School
of Architecture and Design who are developing
a house of the future prototype with
interior modular wall systems and a variety
of projects that are representing new kinds of dynamic
skins and building facades.
The panels back here are from
a previous Solar Decathlon winning project
and these are all angled so that depending on
whether you're in winter or summer months,
you've got more light coming in or less.
An on-site weather station is going to send data
to these control systems and that's what's gonna make
for real optimization, cross ventilation,
privacy control, insulation
and heat retention are all combined with this data system.
So the house of the future actually is going to have robots.
But they're not gonna be like servants,
they're gonna be more integrated into the structures
and the skin of the building itself.
(upbeat electronic music)
The forms and the projects in your booth
really caught my eye, what are we looking at here?
So what you're looking at is our lighting collection.
Which is all one of a kind, generative, 3D printed lamps.
So what our company Nervous System does is we really write
software that's based on scientific research of how
different types of patterns form in nature.
And then we use that to create one of a kind designs.
So 3D printing lets us make every piece unique,
since it's not molded we can take advantage
of generative techniques and programming
to create complex geometry that you couldn't make otherwise.
[Alan] In the future we're going to see a lot more
of these intersections between engineering, computing,
rapid prototyping, and design.
(upbeat electronic music)
Universal Kinetic Inc. has developed this modular system
which at first glance looks like a mechanical futon.
But it's really a lot more sophisticated than that.
Their research is looking into the way that
our demographic is going to be ageing
and wanna be ageing more onsite at home.
So this is a system which can have you upright,
also extend as a bed but some of the more sophisticated
notions are here in the control systems.
This haptic system, this grip, this smart grip
it responds to the force of your squeeze.
This grip system is going to be able to control
the atmospherics as well as the television itself.
Eventually the whole mechanics of the bed.
(electronic music)
So this environment is a pavilion made
entirely out of paper.
A 12 foot high pavilion made of paper fans
by Muller Designs.
Good for exhibition halls but also interior systems,
partitions, this table, the stools that I'm sitting on
are good for up to 60 pounds per 12 linear inches.
So as we're looking for more sanctuaries
in the urban environment we have this material
that gives off this very calming effect
and you can create an entirely soothing experience from.
(upbeat indie rock music)
These were a few glimpses from the 2012 ICFF.
This just might be what the house of the future looks like.
(upbeat indie rock music)
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