Computational Design and Co-Robotic Fabrication for Material Reuse in Architecture
arXiv cs.RO / 4/28/2026
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Key Points
- The study addresses the need to move construction from a linear “take-make-use-dispose” model to more circular, low-waste practices through material reuse.
- It proposes an integrated framework that combines data-driven computational design with adaptive human–robot collaborative fabrication to build nonstandard structures from reclaimed timber with varying lengths and geometries.
- The approach also allows supplemental use of off-the-shelf timber when reclaimed inventory is insufficient, bridging practical logistics with creative architectural outcomes.
- The framework is validated via a built case-study installation called “Timbrelyn,” showing how timber reuse can both meet constraints and enhance architectural expression.
- Overall, the work advances design-to-fabrication workflows that use feedback-driven methods to manage inventory constraints and uncertainty in reclaimed materials for new building construction.
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