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Innovation and new technologies are changing the way we live, paint, and play. From masonry robots to 3D printing, the generation is also changing the way we plan, design, and build the communities and homes of the future.
While there’s a lot going on in the tech world, the generation that’s likely to have the biggest impact across the board is synthetic intelligence (AI).
AI is evolving and transforming each and every aspect of our lives thanks to its ability to simulate human intelligence and process enormous amounts of knowledge to solve disorders and carry out a wide variety of tasks.
Futurist Stephen Yarwood provided an in-depth study on where the AI generation is headed in his keynote address at the UDIA WA State Conference in June.
“The next era of humanity will come in the next 30 years,” Yarwood said.
“We will have neural cords, connected to synthetic intelligence, like voices in our heads, that will fundamentally change the way our cities operate. “
Although the radical upgrade predicted by Mr. Yarwood may be difficult to understand, there is already a wide variety of AI applications influencing the work of the progress industry.
UrbanistAI is an innovative company based in Rome that uses AI to create generative designs and concepts for the co-design and planning process.
The AI tool can improve the elaboration of urban plans and architectural projects by helping to visualize project workshops and co-design forums, as well as by submitting proposals or participating in architectural designs.
While the use of AI is developing rapidly, Damiano Cerrone, founder of UrbanistAI, states that AI demands a replacement of existing thought patterns and processes.
“I see a lack of knowledge about the replacement procedure needed to utilize this generation to its full potential,” Cerrone said.
Cerrone said that much more than simply delivering plans and design efficiencies through generative AI, UrbanistAI is helping its partners think about how they paint and how to use AI to understand, change, and power the way they paint.
“Companies want to understand how to use the extra time that AI gives them,” he said.
“For example, let’s take a classic design procedure: let’s say you spend a few months creating new designs, provide them in a consultation but get negative feedback, so you delete the designs and come back in 3 months with new designs. And keep repeating this procedure until you get a finished design.
“It can take anywhere from six months to a year.
“With AI, the whole process can be condensed into a single workshop because you can co-design the future public space with citizens or with customers.
“However, in the long term, a greater use of that time would be to perceive how to best use AI and start educating AI to perceive its processes and outcomes even better. “
“Every workplace wants to create its own AI genetic models, because only then will AI be truly beneficial, as it will be able to produce designs that fit their own working taste.
“But if corporations start educating their own models, educating AI on the types of design features, objects and buildings based on their concepts and style, we’ll start to see the genuine benefits of AI in our industry. “.
Drones are another generation that will continue to increase the power and efficiency of companies, joining the real estate sector.
While this generation has been around for a few years now, it is the advances and lessons learned since the pandemic that have brought it to the forefront.
Steve Kanowski, partner at Deloitte Access Economics and Country Head – Transportation, says that since 2020, the adoption and advancement of drone generation has been rapid, expanding particularly even before the arrival of COVID.
“COVID has sped up the process, especially in supply chain logistics and other spaces like progress and construction, as some corporations are trying to reduce the amount of human activity in question because, unfortunately, humans are getting sick,” Mr. Kanowski said. .
“We also see that drones are being used more in structural or commercial programs because they can be successful in sites that are very difficult to access, whether they are physically difficult to access, have maximum temperatures, or are in a hazardous environment.
“We’ve noticed examples of drones being used to conduct asset inspections, which used to require one or two more people for a day or two. Instead, they send a drone, retrieve the information, remotely review what you want done, and plan accordingly from there.
Despite the proposed cargo savings and power improvements, Kanowski says the structures industry lags behind other industries that use drones much more effectively. However, he is convinced that adoption in the structures industry will temporarily take off very soon.
“Agriculture is probably the sector leading the way right now. We were very surprised at how temporary it evolved in agriculture. It temporarily went from being undeniable to administering herbicides and eventually offering detailed data that allowed farmers to use far fewer herbicides, bringing with it a diversity of benefits.
“You’ll see similar progress in the structures industry as it evolves from the existing inspection phase to the ability to look at the quality and protection of the structure and see how things can be improved.
“The evolution curve of those technologies is fast, it doesn’t take long to get started with something that’s pretty undeniable and basic, but soon other people start to see the benefits and wise minds start to get started. “to locate tactics to pull it off.
Another generation that is making waves in the structural industry is 3D printing, also known as additive manufacturing, which has the potential to boost production, affordability, and quality of homes.
The procedure involves creating three-dimensional elements by applying layer after layer of concrete, plastic, or an eco-friendly solution to a selected design until the structure is complete.
3D printing offers several benefits, such as reduced construction times and hard labor costs, greater flexibility in design and customization, and offers smart insights for environmentally friendly practices through the use of environmentally friendly materials and waste reduction.
Since it is still a relatively new structural material, it faces regulatory challenges, questions about its structural integrity, and, as with the rest of the structural industry, lately faces a lack of professional personnel and apparatus to implement generation in a complex. stage. large scale.
Despite the existing drawbacks, the prospect of 3D printing as a long-term structural strategy is strong considering the potential benefits and environmental sustainability benefits.
As part of its efforts to address the current housing shortage, the federal government has established systems such as the Cooperative Research Center for Low-Carbon Living and the Smart Cities and Suburbs Program, designed to inspire collaboration and cutting-edge solutions. Study institutes and universities across the country are actively contributing to the advancement of materials, technologies, and structural strategies in the field of 3D printing through studies and research.
While this structural approach completely alters existing housing structure strategies, the continued promotion of choice features will gain advantages for the industry in the long run as we continue to struggle with the housing shortage.
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This story was originally published in The Urbanist magazine, an official publication of the Australian Urban Development Institute (WA). It was edited for reissue through The Property Tribune.
The Property Tribune thanks UDIA WA for the opportunity to republish the paintings and the leadership of percentage ideas in urban progression and netpainting creation with our readers.
Read the original copy of The Urbanist by accessing UDIA WA in the News tab.
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