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How to use robots in interior design

By | June 25, 2012, 4:15 AM PDT

We’ve seen how architects hope to use robots to fabricate buildings, but are there other applications for the machines in design? In Wired Design, Joseph Flaherty highlights two examples of robots in the world of interior design. Meanwhile, at Cornell University, a professor is teaching robots how to organize rooms.

RoboFold is a set of robotic arms, normally used in car manufacturing, that can bend metal into furniture. Developed by British designer and folded metal enthusiast Gregory Epps, the machines gently fold aluminum much like origami. The giant arms, guided by 3D modeling information made in Rhino, make shapes that would be nearly impossible otherwise, since RoboFold fold along curves instead of traditional straight lines. The folding technique cuts down on material waste.

Artaic, a company that uses robotic fabrication for custom artisan mosaics, is the second robot application Flaherty profiles. Artaic repurposes “pick and place” robotics from the electronics industry to piece together intricate layouts for the wall mosaics. The robot formed mosaics are more affordable than handmade images, but the actual mosaics are still installed by humans.

Cornell professor Ashutosh Saxena’s work with robots that can perceive relationships between objects and manipulate them might be the most threatening to human designers. Saxena and his team are teaching robots to use imagination so they can predict what humans would do and prefer when organizing a room of objects.

Virtual humans help Saxena’s robots, actually algorithms, figure out where humans want certain things and why. For instance, a human would want a remote control close by, not directly next to the television, which is where a robot would logically place two related objects. The algorithms examine these human-object relationships and determine a “usability cost” of the locations in a room based on how easy it is for a human to access the objects. A low usability cost is good, since it means a person could reach his mug, remote, laptop, etc. without moving too much.

Interior designers don’t have much to fear since robotic applications seem limited to fabrication and detail work, for now.

Via: Wired Design, ieee Spectrum

Image: RoboFold

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Sun Joo Kim

About Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo Kim was a contributing editor for SmartPlanet from 2011 to 2012.

Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo Kim

Contributing Editor

Sun Joo Kim is an architect and creative consultant based in Boston. Her projects include design and master planning of museums, public institutions, hospitals, and university buildings across the U.S. She holds a degree from Carnegie Mellon University and is a member of the U.S. Green Building Council.

Follow her on Twitter.

Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo Kim

Sun Joo is an independent architectural designer who contracts with design firms. She does not hold any investments in the companies she covers.

She writes for SmartPlanet and is not an employee of CBS.

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