German Aparicio – Blog https://www.archtam.com/blog ArchTam Tue, 25 Jul 2017 14:25:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 https://www.archtam.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2024/10/cropped-favicon-32x32-1-2-150x150.png German Aparicio – Blog https://www.archtam.com/blog 32 32 Meeting the urban challenge https://www.archtam.com/blog/404-2/ https://www.archtam.com/blog/404-2/#respond Wed, 23 Oct 2013 11:12:11 +0000 https://www.archtam.com/blogs/404-2/ Building height vizualization for Christchurch, New Zealand. I recently had the opportunity to present at the “Meeting the Urban Challenge – Smart Cities” conference. In attendance were H.E. Hans Peter Manz (Austrian Ambassador to the United States), Matt Peterson (Chief Sustainability Officer of the City of Los Angeles), Michael LoGrande (Director of Planning Department for […]

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Building height vizualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

I recently had the opportunity to present at the “Meeting the Urban Challenge – Smart Cities” conference. In attendance were H.E. Hans Peter Manz (Austrian Ambassador to the United States), Matt Peterson (Chief Sustainability Officer of the City of Los Angeles), Michael LoGrande (Director of Planning Department for the City of Los Angeles) and many others.

This one-day conference focused on the challenges of urbanization. City planning experts from California and Austria joined together with policy makers, architects, building professionals and researchers from academia to share their experiences and ideas on how to create an urban habitat that caters to the diverse needs of its inhabitants while being resource-efficient and protective of the environment.

As part of the panel titled “Innovative Policies for Smart Cities,” I presented a city information modeling approach that allows users to visualize complex city data from typically disparate sources, and encodes design principles taken from multiple disciplines into a unified urban design strategy.

As part of this approach, ArchTam’s sustainable systems integration modeling (SSIM) software, specifically the SSIMd module, was used to calculate a range of quantitative indicators to help clients determine the most cost-effective, smart and sustainable measures. Key metrics visualized include cooling/heating demand, peak energy/water demand, annual energy/water consumption and carbon emissions.

SSIMdRead_peakElec-cam1

Peak electricity demand visualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

SSIMdRead_annualGas-cam3

Annual gas consumption visualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

SSIMdRead_carbonFootprint-cam2

Carbon footprint visualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

This approach offers an alternative to a more traditional urban design approach, allowing for streamlined, connected planning and design that integrates land and building, ecology and economy. This capability allows ArchTam to quickly and accurately evaluate varying urban design, engineering and planning scenarios early in the process. By structuring our knowledge of cities across diverse disciplines we are able to advise clients on the impact of decisions on buildings, precincts and cities.

 

German Aparicio (german.aparicio@archtam.com) is a computational design specialist with ArchTam’s High-Performance Building group.

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Meeting the urban challenge https://www.archtam.com/blog/404-3/ https://www.archtam.com/blog/404-3/#respond Wed, 23 Oct 2013 11:12:11 +0000 https://www.archtam.com/blogs/404-3/ Building height vizualization for Christchurch, New Zealand. I recently had the opportunity to present at the “Meeting the Urban Challenge – Smart Cities” conference. In attendance were H.E. Hans Peter Manz (Austrian Ambassador to the United States), Matt Peterson (Chief Sustainability Officer of the City of Los Angeles), Michael LoGrande (Director of Planning Department for […]

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]]>
Building height vizualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

I recently had the opportunity to present at the “Meeting the Urban Challenge – Smart Cities” conference. In attendance were H.E. Hans Peter Manz (Austrian Ambassador to the United States), Matt Peterson (Chief Sustainability Officer of the City of Los Angeles), Michael LoGrande (Director of Planning Department for the City of Los Angeles) and many others.

This one-day conference focused on the challenges of urbanization. City planning experts from California and Austria joined together with policy makers, architects, building professionals and researchers from academia to share their experiences and ideas on how to create an urban habitat that caters to the diverse needs of its inhabitants while being resource-efficient and protective of the environment.

As part of the panel titled “Innovative Policies for Smart Cities,” I presented a city information modeling approach that allows users to visualize complex city data from typically disparate sources, and encodes design principles taken from multiple disciplines into a unified urban design strategy.

As part of this approach, ArchTam’s sustainable systems integration modeling (SSIM) software, specifically the SSIMd module, was used to calculate a range of quantitative indicators to help clients determine the most cost-effective, smart and sustainable measures. Key metrics visualized include cooling/heating demand, peak energy/water demand, annual energy/water consumption and carbon emissions.

SSIMdRead_peakElec-cam1

Peak electricity demand visualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

SSIMdRead_annualGas-cam3

Annual gas consumption visualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

SSIMdRead_carbonFootprint-cam2

Carbon footprint visualization for Christchurch, New Zealand.

This approach offers an alternative to a more traditional urban design approach, allowing for streamlined, connected planning and design that integrates land and building, ecology and economy. This capability allows ArchTam to quickly and accurately evaluate varying urban design, engineering and planning scenarios early in the process. By structuring our knowledge of cities across diverse disciplines we are able to advise clients on the impact of decisions on buildings, precincts and cities.

 

German Aparicio (german.aparicio@archtam.com) is a computational design specialist with ArchTam’s High-Performance Building group.

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Parametric future cities https://www.archtam.com/blog/parametric-future-cities-2/ https://www.archtam.com/blog/parametric-future-cities-2/#respond Thu, 13 Jun 2013 21:53:20 +0000 https://www.archtam.com/blogs/parametric-future-cities-2/ Design rendering for Tianjin, China. With more people living in cities than ever before, we are faced with new challenges to design efficient urban infrastructure to meet the needs of a growing population and changing climate. This shifting dynamic implores us to rethink the way we plan and design our buildings and our cities. They […]

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Design rendering for Tianjin, China.

With more people living in cities than ever before, we are faced with new challenges to design efficient urban infrastructure to meet the needs of a growing population and changing climate. This shifting dynamic implores us to rethink the way we plan and design our buildings and our cities. They must be sustainable. They must be high-performing. And they must be places where people want to be.

High-performing places result from a streamlined, connected planning and design approach integrating land and building, ecology and economy. I have been part of a process to develop a software application that can quickly and accurately evaluate varying urban design and engineering scenarios early in the planning process to improve overall performance of systems, reduce cost, and allow architects, planners, city officials, and residents to make informed decisions about our future environments.

Picture6

Design rendering for Tianjin, China.

Para-Form combines the existing technologies of 3d Modeling Software (Rhino), Parametric Modeling Platform (Grasshopper), and Microsoft Excel to evaluate building and community performance in real time. The application links specific design parameters directly to 3d models, allowing users to effectively manage data and consider various design options along with their greater implications at the building and city scales. Beginning with a set of design parameters, the application uses advanced built-in calculation tools to evaluate performance criteria such as floor area ratios, gross floor area, building heights, population, number of dwelling units and parking. The performance evaluation happens in real time as the design team makes changes to the 3d model, which allows for quick and informed choices about the project’s design. Unlike traditional geospatial tools, this application has the ability to assign land use functionality to the 3d modeling environment. By keeping track of land use information we can optimize for land use distribution and achieve ideal urban design.

By developing a software application based on existing technologies, this tool allows for multiple iterations of a new building or city design to be explored, evaluated and modified during the early stages of the urban planning and design process. Bridging the gap between our design and evaluation tools, the city-form application is used alongside other sustainable modeling tools to generate multiple development alternatives, each rated across a range of sustainability key performance indicators, to help determine the most cost-effective sustainability measures. Used in conjunction with an integrated design and planning approach, this application helps to reduce costs, elevate performance and clarify the environmental, social and aesthetic complexities inherent in each project.

Picture2

Design rendering for Tianjin, China.

German Aparicio (german.aparicio@archtam.com) is a computational design specialist with ArchTam’s Architecture practice in Orange, California.

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