Over use of materials and the wider need to improve efficiency in design and construction are two persistent challenges that the built environment faces. Digital fabrication is a constantly evolving set of technologies and practices, offering powerful ways to reduce resource consumption, achieve material and geometric complexity, and improve construction workflow. At Arup, we use digital fabrication to improve efficiency, address sustainability goals, enhance creativity and improve on-site safety, transforming traditional processes and providing new design possibilities.
How we can help you
Reducing resource use
Traditional design approaches create difficulties in the built environment today, not least when it comes to resource consumption. Designing with digital fabrication helps us to meet these challenges, optimising material use and pushing the boundaries of complex design.
By designing for modular prefabrication or even robotics, we can be more precise in our use of materials. In the first place, designing for digital fabrication allows us to take advantage of the potential to use moulds in part production and concrete construction to eliminate waste. This approach to design also creates more workable forms that assemble more efficiently. What is more, designing for digital fabrication allows us to find further efficiencies in material use by looking creatively at already-used resources like concrete and glass as potentially reusable materials. Taking advantage of new technology, we can analyse the strength, usability, and performance of the salvaged materials with precision and confidence.
In the case of Kuwait International Airport, designing with digital fabrication solved numerous client challenges. For example, we were able to half the material used in an already efficient concrete shell structure by designing for the fabrication of specialised concrete roof ‘cassettes’. A manufacturer then used Computer Numerically Controlled (CNC) adaptable moulds to produce 70 thousand of these cassettes. Not only did this improve efficiency, but halving the weight of the roof also started a virtuous cycle, reducing the material needed for the columns and the foundation. The concept of strength through geometry can be widely used in ceiling design but it can also be adapted across typologies.