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Viewpoint: City Information Modelling (CIM) and digitizing urban design practices

journal contribution
posted on 2020-12-01, 00:00 authored by Todor Stojanovski, Jenni Partanen, Ivor Samuels, Paul SandersPaul Sanders, Christopher Peters
New developments in Artificial Intelligence (AI) and digital ubiquity bring revelations of emerging smart cities. However, urban designers are particularly reluctant to become digital and use software that automatically generates cities. Instead, they return to traditional design skills such as creating scale models, sketching, notations and drafting. There is an increasing advocacy for design to a human scale, placemaking and liveable cities. This viewpoint asks questions about the application of AI and generative algorithms in digitizing urban design practices. It reflects on the possibilities of conjoining urban morphology and design theory into City Information Modelling (CIM) as a new digital tool for urban designers and reveals challenges in the ongoing development of new CIM software. Urban designers work within intricate design worlds with toolboxes that consist of customized design elements and symbologies. The design worlds consist of elements, rules and patterns and they act as holding environments for their unique diagrammatic design knowledge. CIM and AI should understand design worlds with customized toolboxes and provide help to automate repetitive behaviour patterns while designing.

History

Related Materials

Location

Oxford, Eng.

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Journal

Built environment

Volume

46

Season

Winter

Pagination

637-646

ISSN

0263-7960

Issue

4

Publisher

Alexandrine Press