Woodstock pavilions showcase intersection of "digital and analog construction"
Student and professor teams from US universities created seven pavilions that explore "digital and analogue methods of construction" for an architecture "live-work festival"Â in upstate New York.
The pavilions demonstrated how machine technology can be used to aid in manual construction, such as sorting wood or pre-marking structures for more efficient assembly.
Organised by Neal Lucas Hitch of design studio i/thee along with Bethel Woods Center for the Arts, the Bethel Woods Art and Architecture Festival 2024 took place over the course of several days in Bethel, NY, on the same historic grounds of the 1969 Woodstock music festival.Â
Read: Heleo and Daniel Ruanova create "low-tech cathedral" for San Diego pavilion
Small teams from US design schools such as Princeton University and Arizona State University designed and built seven large-scale pavilions throughout the property while camping out in glamping tents situated not far from their sites.
The completed pavilions were presented during a large, local farmer's market, with some set to remain permanently on the Bethel Woods grounds and others set to be de-installed.
The theme of this year's Bethel Woods festival, BuildFest: Build Community, Build Creatively, Build Fest prompted teams to explore the intersection of digital and analogue construction.
"BuildFest approaches the dichotomy between the physical and digital not as a binary but a...
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