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dc.date.accessioned2019-07-03T12:46:55Z
dc.date.available2019-07-03T12:46:55Z
dc.identifier.urihttp://95.216.75.113:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/387
dc.descriptionThis text was presented at REFRESH! THE FIRST INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON THE HISTORIES OF ART, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY - September 28 - 0ct 1, as a peer-reviewed scholarly work chosen for inclusion. This text may have been or will be published and/or presented elsewhere by the author.
dc.language.isoen
dc.typePresentation
dc.titleThe Demise of the Identical Architectural Standardization in the Age of Digital Reproducibility
dc.contributor.authorCarpo, Mario
dc.description.abstractThe theory of non-standard architecture is the latest avatar to date of the digital revolution in architecture, now early in its second decade. In its simplest technical definition, non standard seriality means the mass reproduction of non identical parts. This, however, implies a complete reversal of the mechanical paradigm that we have been familiar with up to very recent times. In the mechanical world, mass production or serial reproduction generate economies of scale on the condition that all items in the same mechanically mass-produced series be identical, as in a traditional assembly line. On the contrary, digital technologies applied simultaneously to design and manufacturing may generate the same economies of scale while mass producing a series where all items are different; but different within limits. This paper will discuss some aspects of the present debate on non-standard architecture, particularly with regard to some visual, tectonic, economic, and social implications of digital design and manufacturing in architecture.
dc.subjectarchitecture
dc.subjectnon-standard
dc.subjectidenticals
dc.subjectmass-customization
dc.subjectfile-to-factory
dc.date.issued2005-10


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