projects / info / teaching

THESIS SEMINAR TISCH SCHOOL OF THE ARTS: ITP/NYU

SPRING 2009

http://www.itp.nyu.edu

This course is designed to help students define and execute their final thesis project in a setting that is both collegial and critical. It is structured as a series of critique and presentation sessions in which various aspects of individual projects will be discussed: the project concept, the elaboration, the presentation, the process and time-table, the resources needed to accomplish it, and the documentation. Critique sessions will be a combination of internal sessions (i.e., the class only) and reviews by external guest critics. Students are expected to complete a fully articulated thesis project description and related documentation. Final project prototypes will be displayed both on the web and in a public showcase either in May or the following semester.

METAFORMS TISCH SCHOOL OF THE ARTS: ITP/NYU

FALL 2008 / FALL 2007

http://www.dk22.com/metaforms

The field of architecture is constantly in search of new species of form. Most recent technological movements and capacities are utilized in this pursuit. The increased presence and prominence of new media in the context of architecture justifies a separate study of the forms that arise at the intersection of the two fields. Such generalized entities can be regarded as Metaforms.

BITFORMS COLUMBIA GSAPP

FALL 2006 in collaboration with Liubo Borissov

Bitforms Class at the Columbia Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation Fall 2006. Please visit http://www.dk22.com/columbia to view class syllabus.
Final Show at the Center for Architecture on Saturday December the 16th, 2006 2pm-5pm.

MODERN MOBILE SCENARIO COLUMBIA GSAPP

SPRING 2006 in collaboration with Liubo Borissov

The rise of decentralized technologies will either be the bane or salvation of a disconnected, discontented society. Or both.

Mobile devices are rapidly becoming a dominant means of communication, inadvertently transforming social behavior and notions of presence, imposing a dynamic higher-dimensional topology of data and accessibility over the existing social space. As such, mobile devices provide architecture with both a conceptual starting point and a practical tool for investigating the influence of modern telecommunications on social spaces and culture.

http://www.arch.columbia.edu/index.php?pageData=59969

SOUND IMAGE ARCHITECTURE HAVESTWORKS NYC

FALL/WINTER 2006-2007

. SIA website