20.212 Digital Design and Fabrication
Digital Design and Fabrication investigates the transformation of conceptual design to production documentation and manufacturing within contemporary digital media. Situated at the threshold between virtual and physical, design information and artifacts, it is comprised of both design computation methods as well as material fabrication techniques. The course introduces advanced concepts of design computation such as imperative and declarative techniques of design description and analysis for fabrication, computer aided design and manufacturing workflows and technologies of materialization such as conventional fabrication protocols as well as rapid prototyping and numerically controlled manufacturing.
Number of credits: 9
Pre-requisite: 20.211 Introduction to Design Computation
Workload: 5-0-4
Learning Objectives
- Apply scripting and parametric modeling to construct designs in CAD environments
- Synthesize designs using physical tools and learn a scalable method of production
- Communicate design methods and ideas physically opposed to verbally
- Directly manufacture designs with rapid prototyping and CAD/CAM manufacturing tools
Measurable Outcomes
- Acquire a broad base of knowledge in areas of digital design and physical production
- Learn methods of design production with digitally driven machines (e.g., CNC routing, Laser Cutting, Waterjet Cutting, FDM, 3D printing)
- Apply CAD based methods to generate designs with scripting, surface and solid modeling programs