This article discusses a performance-oriented approach to architectural and urban design that seeks to intensify the interaction between architectures and their specific settings and environments. The overarching aim is to expand performance-oriented design in architecture to urban design and to integrate architectural, urban design and landscape design into a multi-scalar and multi-domain approach. This effort is currently comprised of three distinct research by design efforts: [i] designs for urban areas with a focus on demographic and environmental aspects, [ii] designs for peripheral areas with a focus on preserving or restoring vital local bio-physical conditions and interrelations, and [iii] designs for rural areas that elaborate an integrative approach towards constructions and correlating land uses. In order to facilitate this approach, computational information-based design is linked with systems-thinking. The portrayed research was undertaken at the Research Centre for Architecture and Tectonics and the Advanced Computational Design Laboratory at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design over a period of five years from 2014 to 2018.
Twelve years after the ‘Architectures Non Standard’ exhibition at the Centre Pompidou in Paris, Søren S Sørensen, architect and Director of the Advanced Computational Design Laboratory (ACDL) at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design (AHO), argues for a repositioning of the Non‐Standard approach. He advocates a performance‐orientated method for architecture that can accommodate the evaluation of real‐time data sets and environmental simulation techniques in order to assimilate context‐specific and climatic conditions, like temperature, wind and humidity, in the design process.
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