research   files   >>   interactive   environments

 

 

INFO-MATTER

 

 PHD   RESEARCH    SUPERVISION   AT   tu    delft,    nETHERLAND      >>

 

Underpinnings:

 

Contemporary architecture and its growing fascination with the ingenuity of formal explorations supported by the increasing sophistication of computer aided design software comes with its own pros and cons. The growing importance of formal aesthetic has been misused and misinterpreted under the banner of organic and bio-inspired architecture, wherein mimicking of formal attributes has taken center stage. Computational design and its facets such as evolutionary computing, on the other hand are also gaining importance within academia as well as are percolating into some contemporary design offices wherein a distinction between top-down aesthetic visions as opposed to bottom-up simulation driven analytical form finding are being seriously questioned. Such explorations have been heavily instrumental in exploring biological processes of adaptation, growth and mutation, or in other words are truly concerned with understanding biotic principles and optimization phenomenon in order to derive performative design solutions. The desire to imitate organic form as opposed to understanding inherent biotic processes as bottom-up systemic interactions resulting in outward appearances unreservedly needs definite persuasion within the architectural domain. The research outlines such approaches of deciphering and translating the logics of natural morphogenesis into the digital realm and applying it to an architectural case of real-time adaptive re-use of space.

 

Hyper Cell outlines a bio-inspired evolutionary design process with a primary focus on cellular differentiation, adaptation and self-organisation via collective decision-making processes. The research thus has its roots in the science of Evolutionary Developmental Biology (Evo-Devo), Embryology and Cellular Biology, which exemplify various stages of embryonic growth, cellular behavior and development cycles of an organism. In doing so, our research revealed the following critical traits within the natural world as quintessential: Regulation of cellular differentiation: Each specialised cell type in an organism expresses a subset of all the genes that constitute the genome of that species. Each cell type is defined by its particular pattern of regulated gene expression: the process by which information from a gene is used in the synthesis of a functional gene product. Gene regulation gives the cell control over structure and function, and is the basis for cellular differentiation, morphogenesis and the versatility and adaptability of any organism. At a local level, Signal Induction, which refers to cascades of signaling events, during which a cell or tissue signals to another cell or tissue to influence its developmental fate is equally important from a collective decision making point of view.

Self-organization: In biological systems self-organization is a process in which pattern at the global level of a system emerges solely from numerous interactions among the lower-level components of the system. Moreover, the rules specifying interactions among the system's components are executed using only local information, without reference to the global pattern. (Camazine, 2003)

 

Existing architectural spaces and their inherent static nature owing to their material make-up as well as the nature of linear processes, which lead towards their conception, are unable to provide the much needed flexibility as regards functional diversity, user-driven customisation of space as well as adaptation within a dynamic context. Hyper Cell challenges such linear, non-dynamic processes and by means of inculcating built-in adaptive behaviour within the smallest constituting component of architectural space (the cell) intends to make a transition towards understanding architecture as a performance driven, real-time adaptive construct. The ongoing research builds on the aforementioned critical traits in the natural world and will illustrate intricate, yet energy efficient information frameworks and communication protocols amongst autonomous cellular building components. The research will also elaborate upon a simulation driven design interface (for intuitive communication with designers) as a front end to such non-linear computational process. The research also focuses on the applicability and thus the performance measurement aspects of such collective intelligence driven spatial systems within the context of real-time adaptive re-use of architectural space. Cellular differentiation/specialization is thus seen as a resultant impact of the gene expression within the inherent genetic code via intelligent communication capabilities based negotiation between all the architectural components. 

more   to   come   soon

PHD    01:   HYPER   CELL  

(A   BIO-INSPIRED   information    design    framework    for    real-time adaptive    architectural    spaces)

phd   candidate:   jia   rey   chang

promotor:   Prof.   KAS   OOSTERHUIS

CO-PROMOTOR:   DR.   NIMISH   BILORIA

.

Summary:

 

Hyper-Cell is an on-going research outlining a bottom-up evolutionary design process based on autonomous cellular building components. The research interfaces critical operational traits of the natural world (Evolutionary Development Biology, Embryology and Cellular Differentiation) with Evolutionary Computational techniques driven design methodologies. In the research, genetic sequences are considered as sets of locally coded relational associations between multiple factors such as the amount of components, material based constraints, and geometric adaptation/degrees of freedom based adaptation abilities etc, which are embedded autonomously within each cellular component. Collective intelligence driven decision-making processes are intrinsic to the Hyper-Cell logic for intelligently operating with autonomous componential systems (akin to swarm systems). This subsequently results in user and activity centric global morphology generation in real-time. Practically, the research focuses on a 24/7 economy loop wherein real-time adaptive spatial usage interfaces with contemporary culture of flexible living within spatial constraints in a rapidly urbanising world.

 

 

selected   publications

  • Biloria, Nimish and Chang, Jia-Rey (2012), 'Digital physicality, physical Digitally,' Proceedings

    of the 30th eCAADe Conference, Prague, Czech Republic, HyperCell: A Bio-inspired information

    design framework for real-time adaptive spatial components, Volume.2, pp.573-581.

  • Biloria, NM & Chang, JR (2013). Hyper-Morphology: Experimentations with bio-inspired design processes for adaptive spatial re-use. In R Stouffs (Ed.), Proceedings of the 31st International Conference on Education and research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (pp. 529-538).

PHD    02:   towards   a   methodology   for   complex   adaptive   interactive   architecture

phd   candidate:   Tomasz   Jan   JAŚKIEWICZ

promotor:   Prof.   KAS   OOSTERHUIS

CO-PROMOTOR:   DR.   NIMISH   BILORIA

.

Summary:

 

The research stems from a multifaceted need of us, humans, to transform, improve and adapt our habitats. This need is confronted with inability of contemporary architecture to develop profoundly adaptable architectural living environments. Author’s experience prior to the outset of this research included work on utilisation of interactive technologies in experimental architectural structures and in architectural design processes. The initial hypothesis for this research has been based on this experience.

 

The hypothesis postulates that the degree and quality of architectural adaptation can be significantly improved by replacing traditionally centralised and hierarchical architectural systems by ones that are largely distributed, open and extensible. Such postulated hypothesis implies creation of buildings consisting of very large numbers of adaptable building components. Such buildings are to operate as complex adaptive systems, making them capable of much higher degrees of adaptation, autonomy and robustness than any centralised architectural system could ever permit. Components in such architectural complex adaptive systems are to develop and maintain interactions with inhabitants of architectural systems and among each other. Those interactions are to function as main drivers of these systems’ adaptation.

 

The extensive background research following the above initial hypothesis has shown that such complex adaptive systems approach is not new in architectural thinking and can be traced back to architectural writings and designs developed since 1950s until the present day. Nevertheless, in respect to creation of adaptive architectural systems, the theory has had little consequence on contemporary praxis. Complex adaptive building systems have not yet been developed beyond conceptual designs and experimental prototypes. At the same time, emergence of digital media, ubiquitous computing and the internet of things have triggered a recent revival of interest in adaptive and interactive buildings. Yet, to date, despite growing consensus on the validity of the complexity-driven approach towards creation of adaptive buildings, little systematised knowledge exists in this area.

 

Consequently, instead of developing yet another theoretical variation on the theme of complexity in architecture, the aim of this research has been focused on identifying practical problems that hinder present day development of complex adaptive interactive architecture and on gradually assembling a new framework for such architecture with the hope of providing grounds for methodologies for development of interactive architecture. The purpose of this work is to remove bottlenecks encountered in studied development of complex adaptive interactive architecture and to permit its further advancement.

 

 

Underpinnings:

 

When attempting to summarise and formulate an outlook on new possibilities resulting from the presented research, a larger question about the future of architecture comes to the foreground. What is going to be the nature of future architecture? Does development of interactive architecture mean that all architecture will become dynamic, interactive and adaptive? This question disdains easy answers, as it can be claimed that much of the present-day architecture already is dynamic, interactive and adaptive. Yet, the speed and efficiency of adaptations in present-day architecture are low. Development of interactive architecture means thus that such speed and efficiency can be largely increased. The revolution does not lay therefore in interactive architecture being a mysterious new kind of architecture, but in shifting mode of perception of any architecture as being complex and adaptive, and designing and using it accordingly.

 

At the same time, the above statement does not imply that fast spatial adaptation will necessarily become ubiquitous. On the contrary, many scenarios can be imagined where rapid transformation of architecture is not and never will be needed, where stability, and continuity of spatial reference is desired instead. Yet even in such cases, complex adaptive view on architecture retains its validity and relevance. Preservation of buildings requires often as much, if not more effort as creation of new ones. For example, buildings need to be actively repaired and maintained. Thus, in order to uphold some of their features, many of

their parts need to be adapted, so that they can sustain their functionality and usability in the world that changes around them.

 

In this way, development of complex adaptive interactive architecture does not need to entail a vision of future cities filled with dynamically transforming or moving buildings. Conversely, it can equally point us towards development of cities which are seemingly static, but which actively optimise themselves by preserving parts which are efficient and adapting and transforming parts which do fail, while allowing for dynamic spatial transformations only where they are explicitly desirable by city’s inhabitants. Consequently, a balance is bound to be found between dynamism, transformation, adaptation and comfort, familiarity, safety,

and confidence in buildings and cities.

 

Interactive architecture should also not be reduced to a technical feature of built environments. Its realisation is bound to have a profound influence on our culture and society, our way of thinking and our values. Interactive architecture can deliver new means for association of memories and history with space, and attribution of value to architectural systems, which are by definition in a process of perpetual motion. What all possible scenarios of interactive architectural future have in common, is the increased role of inhabitants in formation and transformation of architectural habitats. Beyond doubt, the future of architecture is participatory, focused on enabling people to form and improve the spaces in which they live their lives.

 

Clearly, the future of architecture as sketched above also requires rethinking the role of an architect. The very concept of interactive architecture implies that an architect cannot be seen as sole creator of a building. However, it should not be assumed that interactive buildings can be created only by their inhabitants. There will always be need for moderators, integrators and “game masters” that design and set rules for games that multiple inhabitants and stakeholders will continuously play in the ever adaptive complex architectural habitats. Thus, as Mark Shepard writes, “The profession has a decision to make. Either it can cede the role of being the primary agent in shaping our spatial experience of the city to the designers and engineers of (embedded, mobile and pervasive ibid.) technologies, or it can shed its interdisciplinary anxieties regarding the purview of its practice and take part in shaping these technologies.”

 

 

NEWS

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at the University of Boras, Sweden, Smart Textiles  Association >> Lecture: Inter-performing Environments >> 2015

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria co-tutoring a Bachelors Thesis course at the Delft Robotics Institute, TU Delft, The Netherlands >> 2015

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria edits the Next Generation Building Journal together with Matias del Campo >> 2015

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria invited to become a member of the OCEAN Research and Design Network >> 2015

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria delivers key note lecture at the ICON Arch conference, Konya, Turkey >> 2014

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria appointed as Scientific Reviewer

Elsevier, Journal: Automation in Construction >> 2014

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria appointed Technical Program Committee Member Smart Electronics and Communication conference >> 2014

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria delivers key note lecture at the ArcInTex Conference, Technical University Eindhoven, Netherlands >> 2014

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria interviewed by CNN International: 

Future cities and smart home applications >> 2014

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria interviewed by Fast Company Daily: Real-time interactive home environments >> 2014

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at the Smart Cities and Big Data convention, Aarhus University, Denmark >> 2014

 

>> Journal Publication >> Biloria. N.(2014); Architecture Institute of Korea, ISSN 1225-1666, Article: Inter-performing morphologies

 

>> Journal Publication >> Biloria, N.(2014); Next Generation Building journal, Balthazer Science Publishers, Article: Performance driven generative design systems, Volume 1, No. 1, 2014, ISSN 2213-4425, e-ISSN 2213-4433

 

>> Journal Publication >> Psyllidis, A & Biloria, NM (2014). OntoPolis: A semantic participatory platform for perfor- mance assessment and augmentation of urban environments. In s.n. (Ed.), 10th IEEE international conference on intelligent environments (pp. 140-147). Piscataway: IEEE.

 

>> Publication >> Achilleas Psyllidis, Nimish Biloria (2014); Intelligent environments 2014 Conference, Article accepted: Ontopolis, A semantic participatory platform for performance assessment and augmentation of urban environments, Shanghai, 2nd – 4th July 2014, China

 

>> Publication >> Xia X, Biloria N, Hommel B. (2014); Aesthetics and the embodied mind, Conference, Article: From film studies to interaction design

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at South East University of China, Guangzhou, China >> 2013

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria appointed Scientific Reviewer

Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) >> 2013

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria appointed Scientific Reviewer & Editor: Next Generation Building Journal (NGB) >> 2013

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria appointed Scientific Reviewer

47th International Architectural Science Association Conference 2013 “Cutting Edge In Architectural Science", Hong Kong >> 2013

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria serves as Organizing Committee Member ECAADE 2013, TU Delft, Netherlands >> 2013

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N. (2013) Performance driven generative design pedagogy: Interfacing multi-agent simulation driven design techniques with environmental modelling methodologies in architectural education, ENHSA Conference: Computation, environment and architectural innovation, Napoli, Italy.

 

>> Publication >> Achilleas Psyllidis and Nimish Biloria (2013), The Adaptive City: A socio-technical interaction driven approach towards urban systems, Proceedings of the 2nd international Hybrid City Conference, Athens, Greece, ISBN: 978-960-99791-1-5, pp. 371-378.

 

>> Publication >> Achilleas Psyllidis and Nimish Biloria (2013), Urban Media Geographies: Interfacing Ubiqui- tous Computing with the Physicality of Urban Space, Media Cities 4 conference, May 2013, University at Buffalo, The state university of New York, USA, pp. 302-309.

 

>> Publication >> Mostafavi, S, Morales Beltran, MG & Biloria, NM (2013). Performance driven design and design information exchange. In R Stouffs & S Sariyildiz (Eds.), Proceedings of the Education and research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (eCAADe) 2013 conference (pp. 117-126). Delft, The Netherlands

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, NM & Chang, JR (2013). Hyper-Morphology: Experimentations with bio-inspired de- sign processes for adaptive spatial re-use. In R Stouffs (Ed.), Proceedings of the 31st Inter- national Conference on Education and research in Computer Aided Architectural Design in Europe (pp. 529-538)

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria interviewed by RAI, Lighthouse, Italy: Documentary series on Robotics in Europe >> 2013

 

>> Journal publication >> Alireza Mahdizadeh Hakak (Faculty of Architecture, TU Delft, Netherlands), Nimish Biloria (Faculty of Architecture, TU Delft, The Netherlands) and Mozhgan Raouf Rahimi (Islamic Azad University, Tehran, Iran) (2012), Journal article: Implementing Unconventional Virtual Environments for Enhancing Creativity in Architecture Pedagogy, International Journal of Virtual and Personal Learning Environments (IJVPLE), Volume 3, Issue 4, Pages: 41-52.

 

>> Journal Publication >> Biloria, N. (2012); Co-Editor, Book: Hyperbody, First Decade of Interactive Architecture, JapSam Publishers, Netherlands, ISBN-10: 9490322091, ISBN-13: 978-9490322090

 

>> Journal Publication >> Biloria N. (2012); Interactive morphologies: An investigation into integrated nodal networks and embedded computation processes for developing real-time responsive spatial systems, Frontiers of Architectural Research Volume 1, Issue 3, Pages 259–271

 

>> Journal Publication >> Xin Xia and Biloria Nimish (2012); A 4EA Cognitive approach for rethinking the human in Interactive Architecture, Conference Proceedings: Rethinking the Human in Techology-Driv- en Architecture, Editors: Maria Voyatzaki; Constantin Spiridonidis, ISBN: 978-2-930301-53-2

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, Nimish and Chang, Jia-Rey (2012), 'Digital physicality, physical Digitally,' Proceedings of the 30th eCAADe Conference, Prague, Czech Republic, HyperCell: A Bio-inspired informa- tion design framework for real-time adaptive spatial components, Volume.2, pp.573-581.

 

>> Publication >> Alireza M. Hakak, Biloria N (2011), New perception of virtual environments, enhancement of creativity, Proceedings of the eCAADe conference, Ljubljana, Slovenia, ISBN 978-9-4912070-

1-3, pp. 967 - 975

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at National art gallery, Vilnius, Lithuania >> 2011

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Delft lectures on Sustainability, TU Delft, Netherlands >> 2011

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Faculty of Architecture, Warsaw, Poland >> 2011

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Harbin University, Faculty of Architecture, China >> 2011

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Nanjing University, Faculty of Architecture, China >> 2011

 

>> Book >> Biloria, N.(2011); Author, Book: Interactive Corporate Environments: Developing real-time interactive corporate environments incorporating computational techniques [Paperback], VDM Verlag Dr. Müller Publishers

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria N. (2011); InfoMatters, a multi-agent systems approach for generating performative architectural formations; International Journal of Architectural Computing, Issue 03, Volume 09: September 2011 (205 - 222)

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria N. (2011); Interdisciplinary Process Driven Performative Morphologies: A Morphog- enomic approach towards developing context aware spatial formations; V!RUS, No.6, No- mads.usp journal, Creation in Process+es, ISSN: 2175-974.

 

>> Publication >> Alireza M. Hakak, Biloria N (2011), New perception of virtual environments, enhancement of creativity, Proceedings of the eCAADe conference, Ljubljana, Slovenia, ISBN 978-9-4912070-1-3, pp. 967 - 975

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Empowering Infrastructure globally conference, New Delhi, India sponsored by ESSAR Steel and organized by Indian Architect and Builder >> 2010

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Philips Research, Eindhoven, The Netherlands >> Interactive Architecture >> 2010

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Design-Code, Dutch Design Week, Eindhoven, The Netherlands >> 2010

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2010); Interactive Environments: A Multi-disciplinary Approach towards Devel- oping Real-Time Performative Spaces, Entertainment computing – ICEC 2010, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 2010, Volume 6243/2010, 254-261, DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-15399-0_25, pp. 254-261

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2010); Interactive Bodies, Forward, Volume 110, ISSN 2153-7526, American Institute of Architects Publishers, USA, 2010, pp. 69-76

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Bucharest School of Architecture, Romania >> 2009

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria serves as Session Chair

ENHSA 2013 Conference on Computation, Environment and Architectural Innovation, Napoli, Italy >> 2009

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria serves as Panelist: CHI 2009, Organic User Interfaces - From Tangible and Transitive Materials to programming reality, Boston, USA >> 2009

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria serves as Panelist: Syn_athr(0)isis event: Technopolis, Athens, Greece >> 2009

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N, Sumini, V. (2009); Performative Building Skin Systems: A Morphogenomic Ap- proach Towards Developing Real-Time Adaptive Building Skin Systems, International Journal of Architectural Computing vol. 7 - no. 4, pp. 643-676.

Biloria, N. (2009); Performative building skin systems, IEEE Explore, Computation World 2009 conference, Athens, ISBN 978-1-4244-5166-1, pp. 119-125

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2009); Developing an interactive architectural meta-system for contemporary corporate environments, SCROOPE 19, Cambridge architecture journal, Cambridge University press, Cambridge, UK, pp. 70-80

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2009); Inter-active spaces Indian architect and builder magazine, Special issue on Digital Architecture, Jasubhai Media, Mumbai, India

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria gives Key note lecture at Key Note lecture at the IxDA, Interaction Design Association, Inter- national South America conference, Sao Paulo, Brazil >> 2008

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria's lecture is at the AEC World Expo, 361 Design conference >> 2008

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Technologies and Construction Lecture series, Building Technology, Bouwkunde, TU Delft, The Netherlands >> 2008

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria is interviewed by the Discovery Channel >> Discovery Science Program, Documentary >> 2008

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria serves as Conference Session Chair ACADIA 08, Evolutionary computation, Minneapolis, USA >> 2008

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2008); Introduction article: Evolutionary computation, ACAADIA 2008, Sili- cone+Skin, ISBN: 978-0-9789463-2-6, Minneapolis, USA

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2008); Hyperbody, (Im) material Processes, New Digital techniques for architecture, Edited by Neil Leach and Xu Weiguo, ISBN: 9787-112-10396-6, China Architecture and Building Press, China

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2008); Non-standard performative architecture, Indian architect and builder magazine, Special issue on Innovate, Jasubhai Media publishers, Mumbai, India

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2008) Morphogenomic Urban and Architectural Systems: An Investigation into In- formatics Oriented Evolution of Form: The Case of the A2 Highway, Silicon + Skin: Biological Processes and Computation, [Proceedings of the 28th Annual Conference of the Association for Computer Aided Design in Architecture (ACADIA) / ISBN 978-0-9789463-4-0] Minneapo- lis 16-19 October 2008, pp.152-157

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2008) Real-time interactive corporate environments, Proceedings of 2nd Sympo- sium on Systems Research in the Arts and Humanities (SSRAH): "On Interaction/Interactivity in Music, Design, Visual and Performing Arts", Baden Baden, Germany, pp. 121-125

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2008) Morphogenomic architecture, An investigation into informatics oriented evolution of form, Proceedings of AEC 08 Conference, Antalya, Turkey, pp. 49-58, http://www.lboro.ac.uk/cice/conferences/AEC2008/

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at University Innsbruck, Austria >> 2007

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at ITD Lecture series, Industrial Design, TU Delft, The Netherlands >> 2007

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria lectures at Goldsmith University, London, UK >> 2007

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2007); Envisioning the responsive milieu, An investigation into aspects of ambient intelligence, human machine symbiosis and ubiquitous computing for developing a generic real time interactive spatial prototype, iA#1, ISBN 978-9059730588, Episode publishers, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, pp. 22-33

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2007) Developing an Interactive Architectural Meta-System for Contemporary Corporate Environments: An investigation into aspects of creating responsive spatial systems for corporate offices incorporating rule based computation techniques, Em‘body’ing Virtual Architecture: The Third International Conference of the Arab Society for Computer Aided Architectural Design (ASCAAD 2007), 28-30 November 2007, Alexandria, Egypt, pp.

199-212

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2007) Adaptive Corporate Environments, CAADRIA 2007 [Proceedings of the 12th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia] Nanjing (China) 19-21 April 2007, ISBN: 978-7-5641-0925-7, pp. 391-400

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2007) Adaptive corporate environments, Proceedings of Sources of Architectural Form: Theory and Practice, International conference of Architecture 07, Kuwait City, Kuwait, pp. 371-391

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2007) Spatializing real-time interactive environments, Proceedings of Tangible and Embedded Interaction (TEI 07) conference, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA, ISBN: 978-1-59593-619-6, pp. 215-222.

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2006); Design Informatics, Architecture Annual 05-06 TU Delft, 010 Publishers, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

 

>> Book publication >> Biloria, N. (2006); Inter-active spaces, A multi-disciplinary approach towards developing re- al-time performative spaces, GSM 2, TU Delft, The Netherlands, Episode Publishers, Rotter- dam, The Netherlands, ISBN: 9059730364, pp. 330-339

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2006) Spatializing corporate dynamics, an investigation into aspects of creating responsive spatial systems for corporate offices incorporating rule based computation techniques, Proceedings of Adaptables 06 Conference, TU Eindhoven, The Netherlands, ISBN 10:90-72152-03-4, pp. 74-78

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N, Oosterhus, K and Aalbers, C (2006) Design Informatics: a case based investigation into parametric design scripting and CNC based manufacturing techniques, Proceedings of Computing in Architecture / Re-Thinking the Discourse: The Second International Confer- ence of the Arab Society for Computer Aided Architectural Design (ASCAAD 2006), 25-27, April 2006, Sharjah, United Arab Emirates

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N, Oosterhus, K and Aalbers, C (2006) DESIGN INFORMATICS: (A case based investigation into parametric design, scripting and CNC based manufacturing techniques), CAADRIA

2006 [Proceedings of the 11th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia] Kumamoto (Japan) March 30th - April 2nd 2006, pp. 237-244

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria serves as Conference Session Chair CAADRIA 05, New Delhi, India >> 2005

 

>> Dr. Nimish Biloria serves as Conference Session Chair: Hawaii International conference for arts and humanities 05, USA

 

>> Journal publication >> Biloria, N. (2005); Developing concept prototypes for electronic media augmented spatial skins, Architecture Annual 04-05 TU Delft, The Netherlands, 010 Publishers, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2005) Emergent Technologies and Design, Digital Design: The Quest for New Paradigms [23rd eCAADe Conference Proceedings / ISBN 0-9541183-2-4] Lisbon (Portugal) 21-24 September 2005, pp. 441-447

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N., Oosterhuis, K. and Aalbers, C. (2005) Design Informatics, Smart Architecture: Integration of Digital and Building Technologies [Proceedings of the 2005 Annual Conference of the Association for Computer Aided Design In Architecture / ISBN 0-9772832-0-8] Savannah (Georgia) 13-16 October 2005, pp. 226-235

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2005) Envisioning the responsive milieu, an investigation into aspects of ambient intelligence, machine symbiosis and ubiquitous computing for developing generic real-time spatial prototype, Proceedings of AEC 05, Conference, Rotterdam, The Netherlands, ISBN:90-8559-057-4, pp. 741-751

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N, Oosterhuis, K (2005) Envisioning the RESPONSIVE milieu: An investigation into aspects of ambient intelligence, human machine symbiosis and ubiquitous computing for developing a generic real-time interactive spatial prototype, CAADRIA 2005 [Proceedings of the 10th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia/ ISBN 89-7141-648-3] New Delhi (India) 28-30 April 2005, vol. 1, pp. 421-432

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2005) Responsive environments, Proceedings of Hawaii International conference for arts and humanities 05, USA http://www.allconferences.com/conferences/20040223191228/

 

>> Publication >> Biloria, N (2004) Developing Concept Prototypes for Electronic Media Augmented Spatial Skins - An Investigation Into Biotic Processes, Material Technologies and Embedded Computation for Developing Intelligent Systemic Networks, CAADRIA 2004 [Proceedings of the 9th International Conference on Computer Aided Architectural Design Research in Asia / ISBN89-7141-648-3] Seoul Korea 28-30 April 2004, pp. 159-172.

 

>> Book publication >> Biloria, N. (2002); Design research work - TKTS 2000, AA (Architectural Association) Year Book 01 – 02, London, UK.