Webinar: Composites in architecture
ÂÌñÏ×ÆÞ is hosting a free Altair-sponsored webinar on Tuesday, Nov. 14 at 11:00 am EST, titled, “Use of Composite Materials in Organic Architecture.”
ÂÌñÏ×ÆÞ is hosting a free Altair-sponsored webinar on Tuesday, Nov. 14 at 11:00 am EST, titled, “Use of Composite Materials in Organic Architecture.”
Abstract: First coined by Frank Lloyd Wright, “organic architecture” describes his environmentally integrated approach to architectural design. It has been embraced by architects across the world and evolved further by using new materials — such as laminated composites — to create structures often without visible means of support. This webinar will introduce some recent applications where — with the help of advanced simulation tools like the Altair HyperWorks suite — architects have found original solutions to balance design, structural strength and cost. In particular, a study of an innovative wooden composite façade for the Varna Regional Library in Bulgaria that acts as both an external support structure and louver system, will be discussed.
Primary Topics:
- Trends in modern organic building design
- How simulation inspires design while increasing performance
- Use of Altair’s ESAComp for wood-carbon façade design
- Future developments for wood-carbon hybrid composites
Presenters are Atanas Zhelev (Digital Architects) and Luca Frattari (Altair).
Click here to register for “Use of Composite Materials in Organic Architecture.”
Related Content
-
Collier Aerospace HyperX optimizes X-59 composite nose cone
Swift Engineering relied on the CAE software’s structural sizing, analysis and test validation capabilities to deliver flight hardware for NASA’s supersonic QueSST aircraft early, under budget and with 25% weight savings.
-
Multi-scale 3D CT imaging enables digital twinning, high-fidelity simulation of composite structures
Computed tomography (CT) provides highly accurate 3D analysis of internal microstructure, performance simulation of carbon fiber/PEEK satellite strut.
-
NCC leads composites manufacturing phase of eXtra wing demonstrator
Key structural elements for a 6-meter section of the Airbus biomimetic wing were undertaken by NCC engineering specialists to produce 28 one-off flying parts.