Tuesday, 3 November 2020

Space Popular designs world's first virtual architecture conference as alternative to "boring" Zoom talks

Space Popular virtual architecture conference

Architecture studio Space Popular has designed the venue for Punto de Inflexión, the first-ever architecture conference held in virtual reality.

Held on 21 and 22 October and featuring speakers including Peter Cook and Carme Pinós, the Punto de Inflexión conference was held in nine virtual rooms set out in a grid inspired by Barcelona's street plan.

Virtual Punto de Inflexión conference
Top: the conference layout was inspired by Barcelona's urban grid. Above: the amphitheatre hosted talks

"It's the most ambitious virtual space we've ever built," said Fredrik Hellberg of London-based Space Popular. "As far as we know it's the first of its kind in architecture."

Attendees selected avatars in the lobby area before navigating along circulation routes to rooms containing architecture exhibitions, watching movies in a cinema space and attending talks held in a large amphitheatre.

They could also network with other attendees by chatting with them in chance encounters or arranging meetings.

Visitors at the Punto de Inflexión virtual conference
Attendees chose their own avatars on arrival

The coronavirus pandemic has led to a surge of interest in virtual replacements for physical activities. Virtual fashion is booming as people look for ways to make their online avatars more stylish while architect Arthur Mamou-Mani turned to VR to realise a structure intended for the cancelled Burning Man festival.

Space Popular, which has previously worked on virtual-reality galleries and installations, was invited to design the conference by curator Gonzalo Herrero Delicado.

"This year, because of Covid-19, we couldn't organize the festival in Barcelona, where it was intended to happen," Herrero Delicado told Dezeen.

Navigational view of Punto de Inflexión virtual conference
A series of galleries hosted an exhibition of Arquia/próxima competition entries

Herrero Delicado decided against asking speakers to give talks via Zoom like other virtual conferences as "I found them very boring and you cannot really engage either with the speakers or with other people attending".

"I was thinking, how we can do something that is more social, where people can talk to each other, discussing, bitching or gossiping about what is happening?"

Space Popular's solution was to create a grid of rooms separated by circulation routes and featuring facades inspired by Barcelona's architecture.

The grid itself is derived from the Eixample (Expansion), the iconic lattice of city blocks created when Barcelona expanded beyond its medieval walls, with the circulation routes lined with abstracted versions of local building typologies.

Visitor view of Punto de Inflexión by Space Popular
Attendees could navigate through the rooms using arrow keys

The main arena featured elevations derived from the city's gothic quarter.

Spatially, one of the biggest differences between a virtual and a real conference is that there is no sense of arrival at a VR event, Hellberg said: "You just click on a link and you're there immediately, which means that virtual spaces can't have all of the very necessary psychological kind of threshold spaces that real architecture has."

With many of the attendees unfamiliar with VR environments, Space Popular kept navigation as simple as possible.

"Always the most important thing is access and inclusivity over what things look like," said Hellberg.

A room at Punto de Inflexión virtual conference by Space Popular
Galería Documental contained a multi-screen cinema

The conference environment was built on the Mozilla Hubs platform, which allows attendees to explore online environments without having to download special software, wear a VR headset or remember complex key commands in order to move around.

"If you have to download something, people are not gonna join it," said Herrero Delicado. "If you have to register, people are not going to do it."

Attendance was limited to 100 people at a time to prevent users' computers getting overloaded. "We had a capacity that is limited by the processing power of the user and their connection," Space Popular's Lara Lesmes said.

Carme Pinós at Punto de Inflexión
Architect Carme Pinós speaking in the amphitheatre at Punto de Inflexión

Conference-goers moved through the rooms using simple forward-and-back commands to prevent them from getting lost or stuck, with sound design used as a key tool to help orientation in both a spatial and a social sense.

"Everything hinges on the use of spatial audio," said Lesmes.

As users entered the auditorium, the voice of the speaker would get louder while the din of delegates chatting in the circulation space would fall.

View of virtual architecture conference by Space Popular
Avatars could approach other attendees to talk to them

Similarly, when they approached other delegates, their voices would rise in volume so they could engage in conversation without disturbing others.

Punto de Inflexión, which is Spanish for Turning Point, was the seventh biannual architecture festival funded by Spanish charitable foundation Fundación Arquia.

Besides the conference, the festival featured rooms containing exhibitions of work entered for the 2020 edition of the Arquia/próxima architecture competition, which is open to emerging Spanish and Portuguese practices.

Established in 2007 and organised every two years, Arquia Foundation launches the competition Arquia/próxima to recognise the works developed by Spanish and Portuguese architects during their first ten years of career.

Herrero Delicado said the conference was a success, not least because of the reduced environmental impact.

"Normally the foundation pays for like 100 trips from all over the world for people to come to the festival," he said. "So obviously, the carbon footprint of the festival was minimised as much as possible. And that was to me was a huge achievement."

Lesmes predicted that hybrid conferences that combine real and virtual experiences will become mainstream in future as technology improves. However, she said that virtual conferences will never entirely replace physical events.

"I would never see it as a replacement," she said. "Nothing is replacing going out for a drink."

Punto de Inflexión was held online from 21 to 22 October. For details of more architecture and design events visit Dezeen Events Guide.

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Masterpatio sliding window system by Reynaers

Dezeen promotion: Reynaers Aluminium, leading European provider of sustainable, architectural aluminium solutions, has developed the MasterPatio minimal sliding frame system that allows architects and designers to create dramatic floor-to-ceiling windows.

The MasterPatio sliding system by Reynaers Aluminium has been designed with reduced sightlines, as well as concealed locks and receivers so that windows can remain in maximum view. The system is intended to be used in conjunction with the company's MasterLine 8 range of windows.

"Throughout [MasterPatio's] development, clean design was always one of the key drivers," the company explained.

"This resulted in its slim sightlines with glass-to-profile ratios of up to 90 per cent, allowing better-aligned surfaces clear from visible plastic or rubber components, yet robust and strong enough for all applications."

Masterpatio sliding window system by Reynaers
Reynaers Aluminium has released its MasterPatio sliding window system

MasterPatio is designed to be versatile enough to suit different settings. This includes everything from houses to high-rise buildings, as the system has the ability to resist wind loads of up to 600 pascals (Pa) in pressure.

"MasterPatio was designed to address a variety of market needs," added the company.

"The result: a master product designed to support the architects' creative freedom, to enable the craftsmanship of fabricators, and to improve the quality of life of the homeowner."

The air-and water-tight MasterPatio system is also durable enough to accommodate window sashes up to 3.6 metres, and up to 400 kilograms of sliding glass in more demanding projects.

Masterpatio sliding window system by Reynaers
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Reynaers Aluminium kept sustainability in mind when developing the sliding system. MasterPatio – like the brand's other systems – is made using low-carbon and recycled aluminium, but additionally includes recycled insulation bars. According to the brand, these result in an increased reduction of CO2 emission of 1330 tons per year.

The MasterPatio system also meets Passivhaus standards of thermal performance.

Established in 1965 in Duffel, Belgium, Reynaers Aluminium designs cutting-edge glazing solutions through engineering aluminium windows, doors and curtain wall systems.

The company's products have been used in projects across the globe. Among them is the Axis Towers – a pair of twisting 37-storey buildings in Tbilisi, Georgia.

To find out more about Reynaers Aluminium, visit its website.

The post Reynaers Aluminium launches minimal MasterPatio sliding-window system appeared first on Dezeen.



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