
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Sven Shockey, FAIA joins Evan and Cormac to talk about Virginia Tech Academic Building One — a 300,000-square-foot computer science and computer engineering building on a new campus in Alexandria, Virginia whose faceted, photovoltaic-integrated form was derived through 1,400 computational iterations. They explore what it means to design a building's exterior before the interior program is finalized, how three distinct types of building-integrated photovoltaics get assigned to 17 different facades based on orientation and performance data, and what a sewage wastewater energy exchange system has to do with a tunnel under a parking lot.
This episode is especially relevant for design architects and architecture students who want to understand how computational tools actually interact with design judgment — and for anyone who's ever wondered what it looks and feels like to sit inside a building where the facade is doing real work. The shadows move. The light is soft. The algorithm found a non-intuitive answer, and then the real design work began.
Episode LinksGuest
SmithGroup
Virginia Tech Academic Building One
Awards
Context: Virginia Tech & Amazon HQ2
Related Work: DC Water Headquarters
-----
Thank you for listening to Archispeak. For more episodes please visit https://archispeakpodcast.com.
Support Archispeak by making a donation.
By Evan Troxel & Cormac Phalen4.7
135135 ratings
Sven Shockey, FAIA joins Evan and Cormac to talk about Virginia Tech Academic Building One — a 300,000-square-foot computer science and computer engineering building on a new campus in Alexandria, Virginia whose faceted, photovoltaic-integrated form was derived through 1,400 computational iterations. They explore what it means to design a building's exterior before the interior program is finalized, how three distinct types of building-integrated photovoltaics get assigned to 17 different facades based on orientation and performance data, and what a sewage wastewater energy exchange system has to do with a tunnel under a parking lot.
This episode is especially relevant for design architects and architecture students who want to understand how computational tools actually interact with design judgment — and for anyone who's ever wondered what it looks and feels like to sit inside a building where the facade is doing real work. The shadows move. The light is soft. The algorithm found a non-intuitive answer, and then the real design work began.
Episode LinksGuest
SmithGroup
Virginia Tech Academic Building One
Awards
Context: Virginia Tech & Amazon HQ2
Related Work: DC Water Headquarters
-----
Thank you for listening to Archispeak. For more episodes please visit https://archispeakpodcast.com.
Support Archispeak by making a donation.

43,970 Listeners

26,227 Listeners

160 Listeners

2,519 Listeners

292 Listeners

333 Listeners

392 Listeners

12,222 Listeners

382 Listeners

787 Listeners

273 Listeners

3,984 Listeners

37 Listeners

308 Listeners

30 Listeners