Erik’s Blog

Entries tagged as ‘MoMA’

Digitally fabbed house for New Orleans rises at MOMA

16 July 2008 · 1 Comment

Over at the TEDblog an article about a house fabricated entirely using a computer-controlled milling machine. The house has been designed and is being erected as part of the MoMA exhibition.

Larry Sass, from MIT’s department of architecture, is leading a team that’s building a digitally fabricated house in a vacant lot next to the Museum of Modern Art in New York City. yourHOUSE is composed of thousands of interlocking pieces, cut on a ShopBot — a computer-controlled milling machine about the size of a conference-room table.

yourHOUSE is a ground-up rethinking of how we make a house. Sass and a team of students analyzed the traditional New Orleans shotgun house, using digital imaging tools and old-fashioned research, such as interviewing people who live in these wonderful little homes. They modeled a way to build a house out of parts that could be created on-site and assembled in days without nails or screws. For the MOMA project, the parts were cut from recycled plywood on two ShopBots in Virginia and trucked to New York, where Sass and his team have been slotting them together to make a classic NOLA cottage, complete with front porch and lacy wooden trim.

TEDBlog: Digitally fabbed house for New Orleans rises at MOMA

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Here Comes the Neighborhood – A Housing Project, MoMA-Style

13 July 2008 · Leave a Comment

NYT reports on new show at MoMA, “Home Delivery: Fabricating the Modern Dwelling,” which documents the state-of-the-art and history of prefab dwellings. Photo above is of Kaufman and Ruf’s System3 house being assembled for the show.

Here Comes the Neighborhood – A Housing Project, MoMA-Style – NYTimes.com

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