{"id":6725,"date":"2012-11-14T06:13:34","date_gmt":"2012-11-13T20:13:34","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.mediaarchitecture.org\/staging\/?page_id=6725"},"modified":"2016-03-14T23:48:38","modified_gmt":"2016-03-14T22:48:38","slug":"our-projects","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/our-projects\/","title":{"rendered":"Our Projects"},"content":{"rendered":"

Flederhaus<\/h4>\r\nThe Flederhaus media fa\u00e7ade is a collaboration between the Media Architecture Institute and Artportal.<\/em>\r\n\r\nThe Flederhaus media fa\u00e7ade is in Aspern, an urban development area in the 22nd district of Vienna. Thefa\u00e7ade\u00a0is an experimental platform that artists, designers and citizens can use to visualize data, create interactive experiences and realize performative projects.\r\n

Orchestrating the depth of light (2014)<\/h4>\r\nJoint project between MAI, the Ludwig-Maximilians Universit\u00e4t M\u00fcnchen, St\u00e4delschule Architecture Class and AHL Media Facade.<\/em>\r\n\r\nOrchestrating the depth of light is an installation that uses LED i.e. light emitting diodes to create an interactive experience in the city. If a person triggers a camera flash in front of the installation, the LED lights will start to blink across the structure. The blinking starts close to the point where the flash was triggered and wander slowly away. This set-up mimics the natural reflexions of the light. (more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

CONNECTING CITIES NETWORK (2012)<\/h4>\r\nEU project with 17 organisations in 14 cities \/ Cavi<\/em>\r\n\r\nMAI is part of the CONNECTING CITIES NETWORK. CONNECTING CITIES is a European and worldwide expanding network aiming to build up a connected infrastructure of media facades, urban screens, projection walls and mobile units to circulate artistic and social content. Together we investigate the questions:\r\nHow can we open live-windows with urban media facades to create a dialogue with neighbourhoods beyond physical borders?\r\nHow can we use a mainly commercial infrastructure for ideas of human futures?\r\nWithin three city visions: the Networked City 2013, the Participatory City 2014 and the Visible City 2015\r\n\r\n(more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

City Hall Tower, Aarhus (2012)<\/h4>\r\nJoint project between MAI and Aarhus University \/ Cavi<\/em>\r\n\r\nThe City Hall Tower was one of the major outdoor installations during the Media Architecture Biennale 2012 which happened in Aarhus-Denmark.\r\nWe lit up the tower on four levels using 5500 AHL\u00b4s S25-3 pixels. The content which is shown is part of the \u201cCity Bug Report\u201d, a system where the citizens of Aarhus can report problems in their home town via internet or even via smart phone. Each of the moving balls represents a bug in a different stage in respect of time and status. At the end when the problem is solved the bug dies in a white fade out. The City Hall Tower now became the most visible representative of this forward \u2013 looking and democratic tool which guides us the way to the Smart City!\r\n\r\n(more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

Hypersurface Architecture [Redux] (2012)<\/h4>\r\nJoint project carried out by UNSW Sydney<\/em>\r\nTwo interactive 8 square meter outdoor media walls in which computational architectural methods where used to design 600+ \u2018Digital Bricks\u2019 that when assembled form the two media walls. Each \u2018Digital Brick\u2019 follows the same design logic to vary size and form and contains AHL S18 LEDs to transform an otherwise static wall into a dynamic media wall, able to showcase interactive content transforming the installation into a vibrant light sculpture. (more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

Chromapollination, Sydney (2012)<\/h4>\r\nJoint project carried out by the University of Sydney<\/em>\r\nInteractive light sculpture exhibited during Vivid 2012 at Sydney\u2019s Circular Quay. The installation featured a three-dimensional LED mesh ceiling (using AHL S18 LEDs), glowing dandelions made of fibre optics (by Optic Fibre Lighting), and motion sensors to enable passers-by to interact with the light sculpture. (more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

Concept study media facade competition for Telstra inner-city switchboards, Sydney (2012)<\/h4>\r\nProposal for curating a media facade competition to retrofit a facade of a Telstra switchboard. The concept study was investigating the potentials for staging an international competition of a media facade together with a parallel media content development in order to activate abandon inner-city spaces adjacent to the switchboards. The Institute was commissioned for this study due to our large network with designers, architects and content developers in media architecture.\r\n

Concept study media content curation Wanda Shopping Centre, Wuhan China (2012)<\/h4>\r\nThe Institute was asked by Wanda, one of the largest developers in China to develop a proposal for media content for a media fa\u00e7ade for a Wanda Shopping Center in Wuhan in the Hubei Province. The institute recommend six international design offices for the competition.\r\n

BoxLEDs, Vienna (2010)<\/h4>\r\nIn collaboration with realitylab<\/a><\/em>\r\nMedia Architecture for the rest of us: BoxLEDs is a lightweight and very flexible hard- and software toolbox for a new breed of social media applications in public space. Due to its flexibility and easy assembly the BoxLEDs were installed for a second time at the Media Facades Summit 2012 in Frankfurt. (more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

Polymedia Pixel (2010 -)<\/h4>\r\nFacilitated by UNSW Sydney in collaboration UTS Sydney<\/em>\r\nPolymedia Pixel is a computer-augmented architectural material. Stepping away from the perception of media facades as merely being a big screen, the conceptual starting point of the project is to redefine the use of computers in architecture and whether computer-augmented architectural materials can define space and catalyse inter-building communication. The Polymedia Pixel aims to be more like a smart phone, when it comes to its sensing and computing power, but in form of an architectural building component.(more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

Concept for a media facade of the Musiktheater Linz (2010)<\/h4>\r\nIn collaboration with realitylab<\/a><\/em>\r\nTechnical feasibility study for a media facade for the new Musiktheater. The concept envisioned covering the main southern facade facing the adjacent street with a series of LED strips. (more\u2026) (German only)<\/a>\r\n

Dynamic Ornament, Media Facade for Architecture Diploma (2009)<\/h4>\r\nIn cooperation with TU Vienna<\/em>\r\nThe Dynamic Ornament was developed as an experimental media facade installation for a continuous integration of digital media into public urban space. Screens are a common interface for digital media content to provide visual experiences for the viewer, but these experiences often only come in the form of advertising. This project was an attempt to provide an alternative solution to a development which is heading towards a massive commercialisation of public urban space. (more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

Janus Face, Sydney (2009)<\/h4>\r\nJoint project carried out by UTS Sydney \/ UrbanAID<\/em>\r\nThe project for the Smart Light Festival 2009 in Sydney proposes a pixel facade generated from 183 greyscale-controlled light spheres arranged as a giant human face hanging above the street to display captured facial expressions. Contrary to conventional screens that display media content on a flat display surface, the \u2018Janus screen\u2019 imitates the complexity and form of a face for a maximum number of curvatures combined in one surface. (more\u2026)<\/a>\r\n

Media Architecture Toolbox (2009-2012)<\/h4>\r\nIn collaboration with realitylab<\/a><\/em>\r\nDevelopment of software modules for media facades supporting the following functions: tracking, sensing, mobile apps, and connection to social networks. The application aims to optimise the impact of large screens on building facades in particular in an urban context. This new connection has the potential to combine digital networks with public space to allow applications for social networks, gaming and location-based media. Thus public spaces could be augmented through social interaction and entrepreneurship. (more\u2026) (German only)<\/a>\r\n

SMS-Millst\u00e4ttersee LED Installation (2008)<\/h4>\r\nConcept development for an Interactive Media Installation at Millst\u00e4ttersee in Austria. The concept study included both Hardware development through a site specific LED installations as well as Software development to run the developed content.\r\n

Concrete LED (2008)<\/h4>\r\nFacilitated by University of Applied Science, Stuttgart with D. Kommerell and A. Renz<\/em>\r\nThe projects aimed to combine architectural surface with LED technology in the same object. Here an architectural surface is, when de-activated, a surface with the architectural qualities of concrete, but at the same time a media fa\u00e7ade that can display media content without having a persistent need for new media contents. This need is usually the result of media technology that exists as an added element onto architectural surfaces, which \u2013 when deactivated \u2013 unmasks the assembly of components. Through an amalgam of architectural surface and technology one can create an integrated media-augmented element that is able to transform either into a space-defining element or a message-delivery vehicle. (more\u2026)<\/a>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"Flederhaus The Flederhaus media fa\u00e7ade is a collaboration between the Media Architecture Institute and Artportal. The Flederhaus media fa\u00e7ade is in Aspern, an urban development area in the 22nd district of Vienna. Thefa\u00e7ade\u00a0is an experimental platform that artists, designers and citizens can use to visualize data, create interactive experiences and realize performative projects. Orchestrating the […]","protected":false},"author":42,"featured_media":0,"parent":0,"menu_order":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","template":"","meta":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/6725"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/page"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/42"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6725"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/pages\/6725\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/mediaarchitecture.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6725"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}