Remove Concept Remove Design Remove Innovation Remove Technology
article thumbnail

Designing for the Future: Henning Larsen's Innovation-Driven Sustainable Architecture

ArchDaily

Image © Hörður Sveinsson The purpose of innovation is to promote positive change and progress in various aspects of life. This involves creating, developing and implementing new ideas, methods, products, or processes that improve existing ones or introduce completely new concepts.

article thumbnail

Holcim and Zaha Hadid Architects team debuts second 3D printed concrete bridge concept

Archinect

Zaha Hadid Architects has released details of a second collaborative effort with Holcim on a 3D printed bridge concept that was first debuted as part of the 2021 Venice Architecture Biennale. The construction was completed recently in Lyon, France, on the grounds of Holcim’s Innovation Hub.

Concept 237
Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Creative Workflows to Innovate Design

MLL Atelier

Why Innovation Matters Innovation is a crucial factor in advancing society forward. The concept of difference-in-degree and difference-in-kind illustrates the two forms of innovation. The latter, also known as disruptive innovation, can completely revolutionize an industry or society.

article thumbnail

University of Miami's School of Architecture to design smart 'Silica City' concept for booming Guyana

Archinect

Silica City' is an 11,000-acre planned community of 60,000 people near the Guyana International Airport with residential plots, a city center, an 'Innovation Village' area, and AI -bolstered infrastructure.

Cities 233
article thumbnail

Ten wearable technology products designed to enhance our bodies

Deezen

Following the release of technology brand Samsung's first smart ring , we round up 10 recent wearable technology designs, including a smart menstrual cup and an air-purifying collar. Read on to see 10 notable examples of wearable technology, ranging from worship-tracking prayer beads to an artificial larynx.

article thumbnail

A University of Arkansas researcher's quest to create stronger and lighter structures using kirigami-based design

Archinect

MIT Technology Review highlights the digital fabrication work of Emily Baker, an architect and assistant professor at the University of Arkansas' Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design. Structural tests later showed that an individual tile made this way, and rendered in steel, can bear more than a thousand times its own weight.

Structure 203
article thumbnail

Six design projects by students at Swinburne University of Technology

Deezen

Dezeen School Shows: an installation that aims to make visitors feel like sea creatures in a plastic-filled ocean is included in Dezeen's latest school show by students at Swinburne University of Technology in Australia. We pursue future production and interaction technologies, design for health and wellbeing and sustainable urban ecologies.