When designing for manufacture and assembly, the designer must find the best way to meet the client’s requirements by considering the most efficient way to manufacture elements of the building and the most efficient way to assemble them on site.
How is the Creative Technologies team shaping the future of design automation at Bryden Wood and why is it such a good fit with the company ethos?.Bryden Wood is the perfect place for this team, not least because of a happy coincidence of purpose.

The Creative Technologies team provide the digital vision to match the physical vision of Design for Manufacture and Assembly (DfMA) and mass customisation – two key parts of Bryden Wood’s core purpose, Design to Value.Everything we’ve done in Creative Technologies has its basis in DfMA, and that, in turn, has shaped the thinking behind how the team is set up, and how we work.. As a team, our design automation work weaves together four threads that run through and connect everything we do.They’re not linear, and they’re not steps in a process.

They’re continuous and reflexive.The relationships are not fixed, they’re knitted together in different ways across time so they’re strengthened by each other and able to hold themselves, to resist tension.

– we look for the patterns that describe how design systems and processes work and we turn them into machine-readable logics and rules.
Algorithmic design.T. hey talk little about the diseconomies of scale.
– a. potentially dangerous blind-spot.In all systems there are performance curves which demonstrate operational ranges where the most beneficial outcomes are achieved, these are always constrained at both ends.
As density of traffic increase on a motorway, the volume throughput of cars.and the car throughput spectacularly dives.
(Editor: Mini Bicycles)