New Publication – Leveraging Building Material as Part of the In-Plane Robotic Kinematic System for Collective Construction

July 7, 2022 /

S. Leder (ICD), H. Kim (MPI), O. Salih Oguz (MPI), N. Kubail Kalousdian (ICD), V. N. Hartmann (IPVS-MLR), A. Menges (ICD), M. Toussaint (MPI), M. Sitti (MPI)
Publication

 

We are pleased to announce the publication of a new paper entitled “Leveraging Building Material as Part of the In-Plane Robotic Kinematic System for Collective Construction” in Advanced Science.

In this paper, the authors present a modular collective robotic construction system based on robotic actuators that use timber struts to assemble architectural artefacts and a portion of the robotic body for locomotion.

Although collective robotic construction systems are beginning to show how multi-robot systems can contribute to building construction by efficiently erecting low-cost, sustainable structures, the majority of research uses non-structural or highly customised materials. 

The authors present a modular collective robotic construction system based on a robotic actuator that uses timber struts for the assembly of architectural artefacts and a portion of the robot body for locomotion. The presented system was co-designed for in-plane assembly from architectural, robotic, and computer science perspectives to integrate the various hardware and software requirements into a single workflow. The system is then tested using five representative physical scenarios.

 

Leveraging Building Material as Part of the In-Plane Robotic Kinematic System for Collective Construction

Duration: 2:58 | © Institute for Computational Design and Construction | Source: Vimeo

These proof-of-concept demonstrations show three tasks required for construction assembly:

  • the ability of the system to locomote,
  • the dynamic change of the topology of the connection between robotic actuators and wooden struts,
  • and the collaboration in the transportation of wooden struts.

This lays the foundation for a future autonomous collective robotic construction system that addresses collective construction assembly and, through its modularity, further increases the flexibility of on-site construction robots.


Congratulations to all the authors involved!

Full access to the paper here.

 

 

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